Handbook of Behavioural Family Therapy

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Aftercare Phase
Alcoholic Family Member
Anorexia Nervosa
Antisocial Behavior
behavior
behavioral
Behavioral Family
Behavioral Family Therapists
Behavioral Family Therapy
Behavioral Marital Therapy
BFT Approach
Category=JMF
ces
clinical assessment strategies
cognitive behavioural therapy
Dementia Patients
Depressed Spouse
developmental disabilities intervention
Deviant Child Behavior
ELA
ent
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Expressed Em Otion
Family Therapy
family therapy for schizophrenia
FO
Functional Family Therapists
guilford
Individual Therapy Strategies
interaction
marital
Marital Distress
Marital Therapy
Negative Escalation
Nondepressed Spouse
press
referen
Resentm Ent
resistance to change
Sexual Therapy
systems theory
therapeutic alliance
treatm

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138923065
  • Weight: 1070g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 26 Mar 2015
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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First published in 1988, behavioural family therapists worked in an area that had greatly changed since its inception over 20 years before. Growing out of the pioneering work of Gerald Patterson, Robert Paul Liberman, and Richard Stuart, whose backgrounds vary from psychology to psychiatry to social work, behavioural family therapy (BFT) had evolved to encompass systems theory, considerations of the therapeutic alliance, as well as approaches to accounting for and restructuring family members’ subjective experiences through cognitive strategies.

As BFT had not been the ‘brain child’ of any one charismatic innovator, but rather of a wide array of clinicians and researchers developing and rigorously testing hypotheses, it is fitting that this much-needed summation of the field was a collaborative product of an array of well-established practitioners of the time. They discuss in Part 1 of the book the theoretical parameters of BFT, focusing on modular behavioural strategies, the indications for therapy, assessment of family problems, pertinent issues arising in clinical practice, and approaches to the problem of resistance to change. Contributors to Part 2 then apply theory to such clinical situations as ‘parent training’ and helping families cope with patients suffering from developmental disabilities, alcoholism, schizophrenia, senile dementia, as well as anxiety, obsessive-compulsive, and depressive disorders. Specific attention is also given to acute inpatient and primary health-care settings.

While BFT had already proved quite effective in treating a great number of family problems, it was only in its infancy at the time of writing. As Falloon says in his overview ‘all exponents of the method are constantly involved with the process of refinement, each clinician is a researcher, each family member is a research subject, and each researcher is contributing to clinical advancement.’

This openness, in combination with a willingness to modify ‘sacred’ tenets of behaviourism while adapting proven techniques from other family therapies, made this title a landmark in its field. As such, it was not only of interest to all clinicians and researchers with a behavioural slant, but also to all family therapists who wished to challenge themselves to develop an integrative approach.