Later life can be a time when our established routines and coping strategies are challenged by retirement, losses, changes in social role and disabilities, resulting in frightening threats to the integrity of self. Such changes may jeopardise longstanding and cherished ways of relating patterns that may seem to be bound up with our very identity, but which may become problematic or restrictive as circumstances evolve. Part of the Innovations in CAT series, and written by CAT practitioners along with service users, Conversations in Later Life offers an antidote to the philosophy of dont make a fuss. Taking a lifespan approach, it provides an understanding of emotional difficulties in later life along with a means to look after feelings in order to better manage distress. With its emphasis on social context and development of the self over time, CAT is well-placed to explore issues of identity as they evolve with age.
See more
Current price
€33.14
Original price
€38.99
Save 15%
Delivery/Collection within 10-20 working days
Product Details
Weight: 800g
Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
Publication Date: 17 Jun 2024
Publisher: Pavilion Publishing and Media Ltd
Publication City/Country: United Kingdom
Language: English
ISBN13: 9781803883991
About Ellen KhanMichelle HamillPaul Catlin
Michelle Hamill is a consultant clinical psychologist and CAT practitioner and supervisor who has worked in the NHS for twenty years in the field of older adult mental health memory clinics and dementia care. She is the co-author of a self-help book for carers: How to Help Someone with Dementia (2023). Ellen Khan is a principal clinical psychologist and CAT practitioner and supervisor who has worked in the NHS for sixteen years with older people people with dementia and their carers. Ellen draws on multiple therapeutic approaches in her clinical work but she particularly values CAT and the relational richness it offers. Paul Catlin is a writer activist and lecturer of Anglo-Nigerian heritage. He is currently fulfilling a lifetime ambition by writing a memoir and sequel to the acclaimed novel City of Spades in which the author Colin MacInnes chronicles his friendship with Pauls migrant father and the prevailing post-war racial climate within the UK.