by Francine Shapiro. (Author)
Written by the developer of the Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR) Method, this book details a comprehensive approach for the treatment of disturbing experiences that underlie many pathologies. The author, who runs hundreds of training workshops nationwide, presents a thorough explication of how to use the procedures of EMDR and integrate them into therapeutic practice. Widely reported in the media, this method has been used effectively with sexual abuse victims, survivors of combat and serious illness, and those who suffer from phobias, among others. This book will be of great interest to mental health professionals and those wishing to learn about this powerful new method.
Format: Hardcover
Pages: 398
Edition: 1
Publisher: Guilford Press
Published: 25 Sep 1995
ISBN 10: 0898629608
ISBN 13: 9780898629606
Finally it is here!! This long awaited text by Dr. Shapiro helps ground clinicians both novice and experienced in EMDR to the origins, evolution, description, and uses of this effective accelerated information processing method. EMDR, which promotes patients' mastery over rather than depletion by overwhelming life experiences, is captured vividly through case descriptions, bountiful examples, and specific verbalizations. Dr. Shapiro's ability to walk the clinician through familiar clinical terrain in a novel way allows for a comfortable shift from more traditional therapeutic modalities to more innovative and targeted treatment strategies applied to diverse diagnostic categories. This book is an essential addition to the library of the forward thinking clinician. --Catherine G. Fine, Ph.D., Institute of Pennsylvania Hospital, Philadelphia, PA
1. Excellent! A practical, step-by-step guide to the EMDR approach. This book will be an invaluable aid both for therapists who are first learning this model as well as for experienced EMDR practitioners.
2. EMDR has generated a great deal of controversy. Thankfully, Shapiro's book is successful in summarizing the available outcome data on EMDR and in presenting plausible hypotheses for its mode of operation. Her reasoning appears scientifically sound and responsible.
3. Throughout this volume, Shapiro has wisely included transcripts of interchanges between clients and therapists that illustrate the application of EMDR. She also provides helpful suggestions on exactly what to do when clients get stuck or progress seems slow. --Jeffrey Young, Ph.D., Cognitive Therapy Centers of New York & Fairfield County (CT)
Finally, the definitive text on Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing! Shapiro's writing style is very accessible. Complex concepts seem to flow off the page and into one's mind. Each is presented in a clear and concise manner. The detailed descriptions and practical applications of virtually every aspect of EMDR makes this book a valuable resource. The presentation of the supportive research material is particularly important for those practicing this new and powerful tool in the treatment of traumatic stress. The book will not only serve mental health professionals who are newly trained in EMDR therapy, but it will be an important handbook for the experienced EMDR clinician. --Jeffrey T. Mitchell, Ph.D., President, International Critical Incident Stress Foundation, Ellicott City, Maryland; Clinical Associate Professor, Emergency Health Services Department, University of Maryland
Francine Shapiro proposes a method of working rapidly and effectively with a class of problems that have been considered quite intractable--and it involves more than just waving a magic wand. So if you want to learn how she does it, or criticize her intelligently, take a good look at this book. --John Weakland, Ch.E. (Chemical Engineer), Senior Research Fellow, MRI (Mental Research Institute)
This book and the treatment Shapiro invented will force a paradigm shift in the way we conceptualize traumatic experiences, the unwanted psychosocial consequences they cause, and the most humane methodologies for affecting relief. For this alone the book will become a classic. --Charles R. Figley, Ph.D., Florida State University, Tallahasse, Florida
EMDR is a proven elixir for psychological trauma and its sequelae. Clinicians: Restore life to your treatment; learn this imaginative new method.
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Trauma can rack the brains of clients and clinicians, alike. EMDR is a proven elixir. Therapists: Restore life to your treatment. Learn this imaginative new method. --Jeffrey K. Zeig, Ph.D., Director, The Milton H. Erickson Foundation
EMDR is an exciting development. Dr. Shapiro's attention to careful treatment planning, detailed protocols, and research data makes this valuable volume essential reading for clinicians interested in applying this method for time-effective treatment. I recommend it. --Michael F. Hoyt, Ph.D., Author, Brief Therapy and Managed Care; Editor, Constructive Therapies, Vols. 1 & 2.
The writing is clear with general guidelines balanced by exemplary case illustrations to illustrate specific procedures and sample phrases to be used by the therapist. ..the description of the benefits to be expected is balanced throughout by descriptions of the special precautions, possible side effects, difficult populations encountered and procedural variations needed. --Nathan Azrin, Ph.D., Full Professor, Nova Southeastern university, Fort Lauderdale, FL for Psychotherapy in Private Practice
For visual learners, this book is a welcome complement to the primarily verbal and experiential EMDR training workshops. Shapiro also trained as a literary critic, has included 18 pages of references and four helpful appendices to round out this well-written book. --Lawrence F. Berley, M.D., Erickson Foundation Newsletter.
The Accelerated Information Processing model of EMDR rapidly focuses and sharpens traditional psychotherapeutic skills with fresh insights that introduce new levels of competence and accountability. --Ernest Rossi, Ph.D., Author: The Psychobiology of Mind-Body Healing.
EMDR is a valuable addition to our therapeutic arsenal. It is not a panacea, but it has tremendous power in addressing the sequelae of trauma and a wide variety of psychological problems. --Richard P. Kluft, M.D., Clinical Professor of Psychiatry, Temple University School of Medicine, author: Childhood Antecedents of Multiple Personality Disorder
The speed at which change occurs during EMDR contradicts the traditional notion of time as essential for psychological healing. Shapiro has integrated elements from many different schools of psychotherapy into her protocols, making EMDR applicable to a variety of clinical populations and accessible to clinicians from different orientations. --Bessel A. van der Kolk, M.D., Boston University, author: Traumatic Stress: The Effects of Overwhelming Experience on Mind, Body, and Society
People often have 'stuck issues' such as phobias, or attitudes about themselves, or tendencies to 'freeze' on the verge of doing something they would really like to do. These stuck issues persist even with a clear understanding of their senselessness and quite often even after many years of otherwise productive psychotherapy. EMDR is a highly effective clinical approach leading to the rapid resolution of chronic psychological problems like these. It has changed the way in which I practice psychotherapy and has enabled me to help my patients resolve issues which had previously seemed unrelenting. --Sandra Shapiro, Ph.D., Private Practice, New York City, Board Member, National Institute for the Psychotherapies, Associate Professor of Psychology, City University of New York
EMDR has bridged the mind-body connection and moved psychotherapy into the 21st Century. It is exciting to see this new book on EMDR designed for the consumer and the curious professional. --Ron Doctor, Professor of Psychology, California State University, co-author: The Encyclopedia of Fears, Phobias, and Anxiety
Dr. Francine Shapiro's EMDR is the most powerful and integrative intervention I have learned in the past five years. --John C. Norcross, Ph.D., Professor of Psychology, University of Scranton, coauthor of Changing for Good and Handbook of Psychotherapy Integration