Acceptance, Commitment Therapy by Daniel J Moran
Duration:12 Hours 16 Minutes
Outline:
ACT model
The essence of human suffering
“Healthy normality” is a myth
Language:double-edged sword
Undermining unhelpful thinking
Aim for psychological flexibility and reason
ACT Hexagon model
Limitations of research and potential risks
Children and adolescents
Acute, bloody hallucinations
Tension depression
Individuals with adverse reactions to mindfulness exercises
Acceptance
Strengthening the willingness to have feelings
The opposite of acceptance is empirical avoidance
Empirical avoidance throughout life
Why acceptance is important
Case example:Teen shyness&hoarding
Defragmentation
Look at the thought, not from the thought
Dealing with automatic thinking
The power of words
The problem of cognitive fusion
Deal with CBT-based disputed technology with diffusions
“Take your mind for a walk” exercise
Case example:eating disorders&social phobia
Perspective
Understanding the”self”of the act
Content as self, perspective as self, context as self
Observer self-movement
Address identity issues
Cases related to PTSD&childhood sexual trauma
Mindfulness
Contact the current moment
Why being here now is important to mental health
Relationship between psychopathology and psychopathology
Meditation, mindfulness and conscious action
Exercises for conscious behavior
Case example: anger, personality disorder, alcoholism
Value work
Positive aspects of language
Identifying core values
Distinguish between values and goals
Creating value-based treatment goals
Ethics of clarification of values
Establishing a lifeline
Case example:heroin addiction, bipolar disorder
Committed behavior
Objective definition of “commitment”
Evidence-based treatment and act integration
Develop an action-based behavioral therapy treatment plan
Improvement of behavioral activation by ACT
Accelerated exposure therapy with ACT
Case example: depression, agoraphobia
In the tension, it must not be
Hexaflex model for psychological flexibility
Ask “conduct questions” for self-help and case conceptualization
Inflexahex model:diagnosis from the ACT approach
Case example: obsessive-compulsive disorder
Incorporate ACT into your own approach
Social skills training
Applied Behavior Analysis
Inpatient treatment program system
Exposure and ritual prevention
Activation of action
Parent management training
Executive coaching
Conscious action plan
Simplified method
Bus passengers:classic action group exercise
How to make you a better therapist
Description:
Having to improve your therapy approach
How often do you review your appointment calendar and begin to wonder, finally, how to help a regular customer who seems to progress for a while?
Every time he/she arrives, you are using the same tools and techniques that you have been using for so long–and almost successfully-but now you can begin to integrate acceptance and responsibility therapy(acts) into your practice and see improved results.
Researched and developed by world-renowned researcher, speaker and author Stephen Hayes, PhD, act fast gets to the heart of a therapeutic relationship by focusing on the approach of treatment.
Daniel J. Smith, an expert on the ACT, trainer and co-author with Steven Hayes of the ACT in PracticeMoran, PH.D.See, BCBA-D.:
Anxiety problems
Post-traumatic stress disorder
Mood disorders
Drug abuse
Anger management
Eating disorders
Trauma
Personality disorder
Take a look at this intensive, engaging and transformative record and start a new path for healing that you can use with your most difficult clients.
Free mindfulness exercises included! You can also receive a copy of the act-based psychological assessment tool and the case-conceptualization form.
Take Acceptance, Commitment Therapy by Daniel J Moran at Whatstudy.com
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Course Features
- Lectures 0
- Quizzes 0
- Duration Lifetime access
- Skill level All levels
- Language English
- Students 160
- Assessments Yes
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