Common Factors Therapy

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A01=Benjamin M. Ogles
A01=Russell J Bailey
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Age Group_Uncategorized
agenda setting
Author_Benjamin M. Ogles
Author_Russell J Bailey
automatic-update
biofeedback
case conceptualization
Category1=Non-Fiction
Category=JMA
Category=MKMT
Category=MMJT
change talk
client affirmations
clinical training
cognitive behavioral therapy
common factors
common factors theory
common factors therapy
COP=United States
corrective experiences
corrective experiencing
cultural humility
deliberate practice
Delivery_Delivery within 10-20 working days
distress tolerance
emotion focused therapy
emotion regulation
ending therapy
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
feedback informed treatment
insight
insight in therapy
integrative therapy
Language_English
metatheory
mindfulness
motivational interviewing
multicultural orientation
nonspecific factors
open ended questions
PA=Available
partnership building skills
planning interventions
Price_€20 to €50
problem list
PS=Active
psychoeducation
reflective listening
repairing ruptures
routine outcome monitoring
scientist practitioner
self awareness
self compassion
self efficacy
self regulation
softlaunch
specific factors
summary statements
terminating therapy
therapeutic bond
therapeutic relationship
therapist empathy
transtheoretical therapy
treatment goals
treatment manual
what works in therapy

Product details

  • ISBN 9781433838873
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 11 Apr 2023
  • Publisher: American Psychological Association
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
  • Language: English
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This book highlights common factors as a psychotherapeutic treatment and offers related techniques that can be used as rubrics to improve clinical practice and training.
 
The authors discuss five key common factors: the therapeutic relationship, motivation, corrective experiencing, insight, and self‑efficacy, which serve as heuristics for therapists of any background.
 
Each factor is broken down into a set of core principles, intervention concepts, and example techniques, such as motivational interviewing skills, confronting distress to move towards change, adopting a multicultural orientation, and empowering clients.
 
Deliberate practice methods are provided so that clinicians can rehearse common factor approaches and integrate them into their own work.
 
Reviewing past efforts to define actionable common factors—including the contextual model of therapy—as well as transtheoretical studies and techniques, the book provides a uniquely well‑defined common factors model of treatment and paves the way for future innovations.
Russell J. Bailey, PhD, is an associate professor at Utah Valley University's Behavioral Science department with a training program for Clinical Mental Health Counselors. His research interests include therapy itself, what makes it effective, and what can make it more effective. Dr. Bailey completed a PhD in Clinical Psychology at Brigham Young University in 2010 and has previously worked in private practice, veterans affairs, juvenile justice, and university counseling center settings, including as tenured university clinical faculty. He is a deliberate practice certified therapist.
 
Benjamin M. Ogles, PhD, is a professor in psychology at Brigham Young University, his alma mater. Previously, he was a professor and academic administrator at Ohio University for 21 years. His main interest is psychotherapy process and outcome research with specific focus on assessing outcome, common factors, and psychotherapy training. Articles coauthored by Dr. Ogles have appeared in the Journal of Clinical Psychology, Psychotherapy Research, Professional Psychology: Research and Practice, Clinical Psychology Review, and Psychotherapy among others. He was the lead author of the book Essentials of Outcome Assessment written with Michael J. Lambert and Scott Fields.

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