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Co-Creating Safety

Healing the Fragile Patient

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Some patients are crippled by fear and anxiety. To help the 50 percent of patients who drop out of therapy before they have received its full benefits, therapists must know how to make therapy a safe place. Only if patients feel safe in their body and with the therapist can they feel safe enough to change. Co-Creating Safety provides clear, systematic steps for assessing and meeting patients' needs. Every technique is illustrated with a vignette. Representing hundreds of therapeutic impasses taken from actual sessions, the vignettes show therapists what to say so they can assess and respond to patients' needs moment by moment, help patients develop and keep an effective focus that leads to change, help regulate patients' anxiety, deactivate misperceptions of the therapist and therapy, help patients see and let go of defenses that cause their symptoms, help them overcome their fears and face their feelings, and help them let go of insecure attachment strategies to form a healing relationship.
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    • Kirkus

      A therapist examines how to help some of the most at-risk psychiatric patients in this health care book. This latest work from Frederickson dissects the nature of extreme vulnerability in patients, the factors that go into producing a particular delicacy in some people, and the added duties caregivers have toward this group. "Our task as therapists is to help the fragile patients recover their freedom to love, to live, and to create a life that matters," the author writes. Therapists can complacently imagine that their patients are composed entirely of their histories, diagnoses, and genetics, but Frederickson stresses that this would be a mistake. If he and his fellow therapists do this, "we relate to dead concepts rather than living persons." Instead, therapists must "mobilize the self-creative capacity to act." The goal is not to steamroll patient anxiety in order to commence therapy but rather to create the feeling of personal safety necessary for healing. If the therapist rushes ahead without taking care to regulate the patient's anxiety, Frederickson points out, the caregiver will become a source of danger rather than a fount of help. He makes a comparison with a shattered plate. No one would equate any of the broken pieces with the whole plate, and therapists need to differentiate between the symptoms of anxiety and the signs of the more severe "splitting" and "dissociation" that the condition often presages. The author uses an array of techniques in order to convey a large amount of complicated information: charts, graphs, anecdotes, dialogue examples, extensive secondary references, and bullet points fill the text. Frederickson's tone is affirming throughout and always on the side of the patient. "No therapist should act as the captain," he writes. "Our task is to help the patient become the skipper of her own ship." The author's fellow professionals will learn a great deal from these pages, but the layperson will find them very informative as well. A smart, sympathetic, and detailed overview of the most vulnerable patients.

      COPYRIGHT(2021) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. (Online Review)

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Languages

  • English

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