Book Search
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Posttraumatic Growth in Clinical Practice
From the authors who pioneered the concept of posttraumatic growth comes Posttraumatic Growth in Clinical Practice, a book that brings the study of growth after trauma into the twenty-first century. Clinicians will find a framework that’s easy to use and flexible enough to be tailored to the needs...
Published December 7th 2012 by Routledge
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Handbook of Posttraumatic Growth
Research and Practice
Posttraumatic growth is an area in which investigations are now being undertaken in many different parts of the world. The view that individuals can be changed--sometimes in radically good ways--by their struggle with trauma is ancient and widespread. However, the systematic focus by scholars and...
Published March 27th 2006 by Routledge
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Helping Bereaved Parents
A Clinician's Guide
Series: Series in Death, Dying, and Bereavement
This book provides a concise, yet comprehensive guide to effective work with bereaved parents, combining a broad overview of current research, theory, and practice with the authors' own extensive clinical experience. Transcripts of individual, couple, and group meetings illustrate the delicate...
Published November 18th 2003 by Routledge
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Facilitating Posttraumatic Growth
A Clinician's Guide
In this book, Calhoun and Tedeschi construct the first systematic framework for clinical efforts to enhance the processes they sum up as posttraumatic growth. Posttraumatic growth is the phenomenon of positive change through struggle with even the most horrible sets of circumstances. People who...
Published June 30th 1999 by Routledge
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Posttraumatic Growth
Positive Changes in the Aftermath of Crisis
That which does not kill us makes us stronger. (Nietzsche) The phenomenon of positive personal change following devastating events has been recognized since ancient times, but given little attention by contemporary psychologists and psychiatrists, who have tended to focus on the negative...
Published February 28th 1998 by Routledge
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Posttraumatic Growth
Positive Changes in the Aftermath of Crisis
That which does not kill us makes us stronger. (Nietzsche) The phenomenon of positive personal change following devastating events has been recognized since ancient times, but given little attention by contemporary psychologists and psychiatrists, who have tended to focus on the negative...
Published February 28th 1998 by Routledge