Cantitate/Preț
Produs

Relational Ethics in Psychotherapy and Counselling Private Practice: Solidarity, Compassion, Justice: Ethics In Action

Autor Caz Binstead, Nicholas Sarantakis
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 26 noi 2024
This book explores the ethics around everything connected with setting up and running a therapy private practice.
Offering a hands-on approach to realistic ethical dilemmas encountered by the private practitioner, the book examines the everyday management of practice, and the context of ethical issues in contemporary private practice. Chapters explore the fundamentals of some of the most common ethical considerations in private practice, providing space for the reader to think creatively about how they use their preferred ethical framework, and how that may be translated into an individually tailored approach for each client, and for each private practice. The book provides exercises, examples, and vignettes, in addition to the author’s own unique working model, to help the reader bring theoretical reflections into their own everyday practice.
Relational Ethics in Psychotherapy and Counselling Private Practice will help private practitioners feel more confident and grounded in their private practice and up-to-date with developing thoughts. It will also appeal to training institutes, supervisors, and students.
Citește tot Restrânge

Din seria Ethics In Action

Preț: 14239 lei

Preț vechi: 17554 lei
-19% Nou

Puncte Express: 214

Preț estimativ în valută:
2725 2931$ 2272£

Carte nepublicată încă

Doresc să fiu notificat când acest titlu va fi disponibil:

Preluare comenzi: 021 569.72.76

Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781032564593
ISBN-10: 1032564598
Pagini: 170
Dimensiuni: 148 x 210 mm
Ediția:1
Editura: Taylor & Francis
Colecția Routledge
Seria Ethics In Action

Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom

Public țintă

Professional Practice & Development and Professional Reference

Recenzii

‘This is a truly engaging and accessible book, an essential text for therapists at any stage in their private practice journey. The landscape of therapy has changed considerably in recent years, not least due to the Covid-19 pandemic, and Binstead & Sarantakis address wide ranging issues from the basics of contracting and finding our target market through to working online and the use of social media in a contemporary context. As such it is as valuable for trainee therapists and those just beginning to consider setting up in private practice as it is for practitioners such as myself who have been established for many years. Appropriately for a book about relational ethics it explores the various topics experientially, using thought-provoking case studies and exercises to prompt the reader to consider their own responses to ethical issues, rather than providing binary solutions. Solidarity, Compassion, Justice are themes throughout the book and I felt held by the authors’ commitment to those tenets. A long-overdue book in my view, one I highly recommend to anyone interested in the ethics of therapeutic work, not just those in private practice.’
Susan Utting-Simon, senior accredited counsellor, psychotherapist & supervisor in private practice, former Chair of BACP Private Practice Division
‘This book offers a very comprehensive, in depth and thorough exploration of the different intersecting layers that make up private practice. A text which will be of benefit to new practitioners, this book offers a wide ranging exploration of just how one can construct the private practice environment within which our work can flourish and also within which our clients can feel safe, contained, and therefore feel met. There is another layer to this book though. This book also presents some very nuanced and interesting ideas and exercises regarding how we might use the wider socially conscious environment to the benefit of our counselling and psychotherapy private practices. One of the most brilliant parts about this book is the layers of thought that have gone into the use of different models and the exercises which are attached to them. It is a book which I would recommend for practitioners to read and also for courses to add on to their reading lists, so that students and trainees towards the end of their trainings can have access to this gateway text which opens the door towards private practice.’
Dr Dwight Turner, course Leader on the Humanistic Counselling and Psychotherapy Course at the University of Brighton, PhD Supervisor at their Doctoral College, psychotherapist and supervisor in private practice
‘Finally, a book that captures all the challenges and joys of setting up and running a successful, ethical private practice. It's the book I wish I had when I was setting up my business. Packed full of useful tips, reflections and examples; it is must-read for anyone embarking on, maintaining or supporting others in their private practice. Not only will it benefit those setting up their private practice, it serves as an invaluable tool for the seasoned practitioner wanting to refresh their business. Equally, for supervisors working with supervisees who are venturing into private practice, this book could help you to support them on their journey. Bravo!’
Dr Mish Seabrook, resilience coach, therapist & supervisor
‘Neither the beautiful city of Rome nor a successful private practice can (or should) be built in a day. Both take time, skill, patience, and vision. Rome is assembled and standing strong, while Binstead and Sarantakis are here to metaphorically hold your hand as you build your private practice; chapter by chapter; brick by brick. But they don’t just want you to build, they want you to build ethically; and not just ethically, but relationally, and that’s what makes this book different from the rest. They’ve thought of everything – so you will too – and guide you every step of the way from graduation, through marketing, contracting, social media and supervision, to ending, all through a three-dimensional lens. If you’re ready to build, consider this your foundational brick.’
Jeanine Connor, psychodynamic psychotherapist in private practice and author of You’re Not My F*cking Mother’ and other things Gen Z say in therapy (PCCS, 2024), Stop F*cking Nodding’ and other things 16 year olds say in therapy (PCCS, 2022) and Reflective Practice with Children and Adolescents (Routledge, 2020)

Cuprins

1. The rational for this book, and an introduction to the three-dimensional model  2. Initial ethical considerations into transitioning from being a student to a private practitioner  3. Ethical confidence in our practices: Admin and everyday practice management  4. Getting yourself seen!: Ethical marketing, in a 21st-century practice  5. Building your practice: Contracting and engagement  6. A brief overview of the different forms of online therapy and the respective ethical considerations  7. Ethics in couple’s, family, and group therapy in private practice  8. Social awareness in contemporary practice  9. Managing endings in an ethical way  10. Use of individual supervision vs. alternative supportive spaces  11. Social media communities: A space to be heard?

Notă biografică

Caz Binstead is an experienced therapist, supervisor, writer, and facilitator. She was instrumental in the creation of the Private practice toolkit at the British Association for Counselling and Psychotherapy (BACP). Caz is also co-lead of the large online therapy platform #TherapistsConnect, and founder of their popular student project #TraineeTalk.
Nicholas Sarantakis is a practising Counselling Psychologist and couple, family and group therapist in London and Milton Keynes. He has authored several articles and taught at five U.K. universities as a Senior Lecturer and Director of Studies.

Descriere

This book explores the ethics around everything connected with setting up and running a therapy private practice.