Academic literature on the topic 'Therapist warmth'

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Journal articles on the topic "Therapist warmth"

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Conroy, D. A., A. Mooney, D. Pace, S. Balstad, K. Dubuc, A. Yang, A. Furgal, A. Sen, and J. Arnedt. "0513 Comparison of Patient Satisfaction and Therapeutic Alliance for Telemedicine vs. Face-to-Face Delivered Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Insomnia." Sleep 43, Supplement_1 (April 2020): A196—A197. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/sleep/zsaa056.510.

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Abstract Introduction CBT for insomnia (CBTI) is effective but a barrier to its widespread use is the lack of evidence-based delivery modalities other than face-to-face. The perception and acceptability of telemedicine for the delivery of CBTI is unknown. We conducted a randomized controlled non-inferiority trial comparing face-to-face (F2F) and telemedicine (via AASM SleepTM) delivery of CBTI. We compared measures of patient satisfaction with treatment and the perception of the therapist’s warmth and skills between F2F and SleepTM. Methods Adults with insomnia were recruited from insomnia clinics and the community and screened for sleep, medical, and mental health disorders. Eligible participants were randomized to receive CBTI either via AASM SleepTM or F2F in 6 weekly sessions of 45-60 minutes each. Participants completed the Client Satisfaction Questionnaire (CSQ-8) and The Therapy Evaluation Questionnaire (TEQ) after completing treatment. The CSQ-8 score ranges from 8-32 with high scores indicating greater satisfaction. We also analyzed the two items on the TEQ that assess participants’ perception of therapist’s warmth and skills. Item scores ranged from 1-7, with higher scores indicating greater warmth and skills. Results Sixty-five adults with chronic insomnia were recruited primarily from insomnia clinics. Sixty-two participants (41 women, mean age 48.9 ± 15.4 years) completed all 6 sessions of CBTI via F2F (n=32) or via AASM SleepTM (n=30). Independent samples t-tests revealed no significant differences between conditions on patient satisfaction (SleepTM, 28.5 +/-4.2 vs F2F 29.9 +/-2.4, t(-1.5), p=.14), therapist warmth (SleepTM, 6.0 ±1.1 vs F2F, 6.4±0.95, t(-1.4), p=.16), or therapist skills (Sleep TM 6.4 ±1.0 vs F2F, 6.7±0.59, t(-1.5), p=.15). Conclusion Our findings suggest no differences in patient satisfaction, perception of therapist’s warmth, or confidence in therapist’s skills between telemedicine (via the AASM SleepTM) and F2F delivery of CBTI. Telemedicine-delivered CBTI should be implemented more widely. Support Research supported by American Sleep Medicine Foundation Grant # 168-SR-17 (JT Arnedt)
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Gordon, Robert M., Zhenyu Shi, David E. Scharff, Ralph E. Fishkin, and R. Dennis Shelby. "An International Survey of the Concept of Effective Psychodynamic Treatment During the Pandemic." Psychodynamic Psychiatry 49, no. 3 (August 2021): 453–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.1521/pdps.2021.49.3.453.

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Introduction: Most psychotherapists had no choice during the COVID-19 pandemic but to offer teletherapy in order to provide needed treatment. Several psychoanalytic theorists wondered if the very concept of treatment would change without an embodied relationship in an office setting. Methods: To attempt to understand the current concept of effective psychodynamic treatment in the new norm of teletherapy, we surveyed practitioners from 56 countries and regions who remotely treated patients psychodynamically during the beginning months of the pandemic. We asked the practitioners to rank six factors felt to be important to psychodynamic treatment: use of the couch during sessions, session in-office or via teletherapy, cultural similarity between therapist and patient, number of sessions a week, patient factors (motivation, insightfulness, and high functioning) and therapist factors (empathy, warmth, wisdom, and skillfulness). Results: We received 1,490 survey responses. As predicted, we found that the therapist and patient variables were considered much more important (both tied as highest rankings) to effective treatment than any of the other variables, including if the therapy was in-office or by teletherapy. Discussion: Psychodynamic practitioners worldwide confirmed that the empathy, warmth, wisdom, and skillfulness of the therapist and the motivation, insightfulness, and level of functioning of the patient are most important to treatment effectiveness regardless if the treatment is remote or embodied.
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GREEN, ROBERT-JAY, and MARY HERGET. "Outcomes of Systemic/Strategic Team Consultation:. III. The Importance of Therapist Warmth and Active Structuring." Family Process 30, no. 3 (September 1991): 321–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1545-5300.1991.00321.x.

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Schade, Lori C., Jonathan G. Sandberg, Angela Bradford, James M. Harper, Julianne Holt-Lunstad, and Richard B. Miller. "A Longitudinal View of the Association Between Therapist Warmth and Couples' In-Session Process: An Observational Pilot Study of Emotionally Focused Couples Therapy." Journal of Marital and Family Therapy 41, no. 3 (June 4, 2014): 292–307. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jmft.12076.

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Jennings, Jerry L., and Adam Deming. "Review of the Empirical and Clinical Support for Group Therapy Specific to Sexual Abusers." Sexual Abuse 29, no. 8 (December 9, 2015): 731–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1079063215618376.

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This review compiles 48 empirical studies and 55 clinical/practice articles specific to group therapy with sex offenders. Historically, group therapy has always been the predominant modality in sex offender–specific treatment. In the first decades of the field, treatment applied a psychoanalytic methodology that, although not empirically supported, fully appreciated the primary therapeutic importance of the group modality. Conversely, since the early 1980s, treatment has applied a cognitive behavioral method, but the field has largely neglected the therapeutic value of interpersonal group dynamics. The past decade has seen a growing re-appreciation of general therapeutic processes and more holistic approaches in sex offender treatment, and there is an emerging body of empirical research which, although often indirectly concerned with group, has yielded three definitive conclusions. First, the therapeutic qualities of the group therapist—specifically warmth, empathy, encouragement, and guidance—can strongly affect outcomes. Second, the quality of group cohesion can profoundly affect the effectiveness of treatment. Third, confrontational approaches in group therapy are ineffective, if not counter-therapeutic, and overwhelmingly rated as not helpful by sex offenders themselves. Additional conclusions are less strongly supported, but include compelling evidence that sex offenders generally prefer group therapy over individual therapy, that group therapy appears equally effective to individual therapy, and that mixing or separating groups by offense type is not important to therapeutic climate. Other group techniques and approaches specific to sexual abuse treatment are also summarized.
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Glennon, Thomas M., and Marylie Karlovac. "The effect of fee level on therapists' perception of competence and nonpossessive warmth." Journal of Contemporary Psychotherapy 18, no. 3 (1988): 249–58. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/bf00945949.

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Neidigh, Larry W. "An Experimental Analogue Examining Effects of Facilitative Behaviors and Subjects' Warmth on Students' Perceptions of a Counseling Relationship." Psychological Reports 68, no. 3_suppl (June 1991): 1099–106. http://dx.doi.org/10.2466/pr0.1991.68.3c.1099.

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This study examined the effects of students' self-reported ratings on warmth and a female counselor's facilitative behavior on scores measuring the subjects' perception of the counseling relationship. 75 subjects were categorized as warm, neutral, or cool and then randomly assigned to either a facilitative or nonfacilitative counselor condition. Scores from the Barrett-Lennard Relationship Inventory indicate significant main effects for both subjects' warmth and the therapist's facilitative behaviors. In addition, significant interactions between these variables were obtained. The specific interpretations of these results are discussed and methodological issues are identified for further research.
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Slee, Nadja, Ella Arensman, Nadia Garnefski, and Philip Spinhoven. "Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy for Deliberate Self-Harm." Crisis 28, no. 4 (July 2007): 175–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.1027/0227-5910.28.4.175.

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Patients who engage in deliberate self-harm (DSH) form a heterogeneous population. There is a need for psychotherapeutic interventions that give therapists the flexibility to tailor the treatment plan to the needs of an individual patient. To detect essential ingredients for treatment, three different cognitive-behavioral theories of DSH will be reviewed: (1) the cognitive-behavioral theory of Linehan (1993a) , (2) the cognitive theory of Berk, Henriques, Warman, Brown, and Beck (2004) , and (3) the cognitive-behavioral theory of Rudd, Joiner, and Rajab (2001) . A review of these theories makes it possible to compare the different approaches to the essential aspects in the treatment of DSH: a trusting patient-therapist relationship, building emotion regulation skills, cognitive restructuring, and behavioral pattern breaking. An overview will be given of therapeutic techniques that can be used to address the cognitive, emotional, behavioral, and interpersonal problems associated with DSH.
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Bachmann. "Das Kind im Schock – Pathophysiologie, Früherkennung und Therapie." Therapeutische Umschau 62, no. 8 (August 1, 2005): 533–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.1024/0040-5930.62.8.533.

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Der Schock im Kindesalter ist ein gefährliches, oftmals tödlich verlaufendes Syndrom. Pathophysiologisch ist dieser Zustand durch ein ungenügendes Sauerstoffangebot im Verhältnis zum Verbrauch gekennzeichnet. Meistens ist dies bedingt durch eine ungenügende Funktion des Herz-Kreislauf-Systems. Ursachen können hypovolämische Zustände, distributive oder kardiogene Störungen sein, seltener sind Obstruktionen des kardialen Ausflusstraktes oder Störungen der Sauerstoffbindung an das Hämoglobin. Durch die resultierende Hypoxie kommt es zu einer Laktazidose. Die klinischen Leitsymptome sind gekennzeichnet durch Tachykardie, Tachypnoe und Unruhe. Es handelt sich um einen instabilen Zustand, den es frühzeitig zu erkennen und zu behandeln gilt. Es ist deshalb wichtig sich bewusst zu sein, dass es sich um ein fortschreitendes Geschehen handelt, in dessen Verlauf es vorerst durch Kompensationsmechanismen zu erhöhtem Herzminutenvolumen, warmer Peripherie und trockener Haut (warmer Schock), und erst später zur Dekompensation mit peripherer Vasokonstriktion, feucht-kalter Haut und Abnahme des Herzminutenvolumens kommt (kalter Schock). Schließlich erfolgt bei ausbleibender oder zu spät eingesetzter Therapie eine fortschreitende Zellschädigung mit Zelltod und damit Multiorganversagen (Multiple Organ Dysfunction Syndrome), das schließlich zum Tod des Patienten führt. Therapeutisch ist eine aggressive Volumentherapie mit natriumreichen Flüssigkeiten oder mit kolloidalen Plasmaersatzpräparaten indiziert, in ausgewählten Fällen sind auch Blutprodukte einzusetzen. Nach genügender Füllung des Kreislaufsystems soll eine Unterstützung desselben mittels inotropen Medikamenten angestrebt werden. Durch Kenntnisse von Grunderkrankungen und pathophysiologischen Zusammenhängen, durch Früherkennung und sofortiger Therapie kann die immer noch hohe Zahl der Todesfälle infolge von Schock im Kindesalter reduziert werden.
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Finlay, Linda. "Good Patients and Bad Patients: How Occupational Therapists View Their Patients/Clients." British Journal of Occupational Therapy 60, no. 10 (October 1997): 440–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/030802269706001004.

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Many studies have highlighted how health professionals tend to categorise their patients in terms of moral evaluations, in particular perceiving patients as ‘good’ and ‘bad’. This article reports on a qualitative study which explored how occupational therapists experienced their patients/clients, investigating what social evaluations were made. Nine occupational therapists were interviewed using a relatively non-directive, phenomenological approach. Although the therapists were reluctant to stereotype their patients/clients, the use of moral and social evaluations was widespread. ‘Good’ patients were warmly responsive and made the therapists feel valued and effective. ‘Bad’ patients were manipulative, threatening and resisted change. An additional category of ‘difficult’ patients emerged which reflected the therapists' ambivalent responses to this patient/client group, who were experienced as positively challenging but hard work. The discussion emphasises how social evaluations are complex and involve multiple meanings which emerge in different contexts with different individuals.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Therapist warmth"

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Schade, Lori Kay. "A Longitudinal View of the Association Between Therapist Behaviors and Couples' In-Session Process: An Observational Pilot Study of Emotionally Focused Couples Therapy." BYU ScholarsArchive, 2013. https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd/3682.

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This is a longitudinal couples therapy process study using coded data from eleven couples to identify which therapist behaviors (warmth, listener responsiveness, communication, dominance) influenced positive couples exchanges (warmth and listener responsiveness) over time in Emotionally Focused Couples Therapy (EFT). A mixed effects model was used to examine within- and between-individual variability. Men and women were modeled separately. A series of two-level multilevel models of change were examined, where Time is Level 1 and Individual is Level 2. Results indicated no significant relationship between variables of therapist warmth, listener responsiveness, communication, and dominance with couple listener responsiveness. Where client warmth was an outcome variable, the only significant relationship was between therapist warmth toward husband and husband warmth toward wife. Findings demonstrated that 62.9% of the variance in husband warmth toward wife was accounted for by therapist warmth to husband across time in therapy. Specifically, therapist warmth toward husband was significantly and positively related to husband warmth toward wife over time in therapy. Clinical implications and directions for future research are discussed.
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Books on the topic "Therapist warmth"

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Sunderkötter, Cord, and Luis Requena. Panniculitides. Oxford University Press, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780199642489.003.0165.

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Panniculitis is an inflammation that originates primarily in the subcutaneous fatty tissue (panniculus adiposus). It is associated with rheumatological diseases and with adverse events to rheumatological therapies (e.g. poststeroid panniculitis, erythema nodosum, infective panniculitis). The panniculitides are classified histopathologically into mostly septal panniculitis and mostly lobular panniculitis, according to the major or denser localization of the infiltrate, and also into those with or without vasculitis. Additional criteria involve the composition of the inflammatory infiltrate, the cause, and an underlying or associated disease. The clinical hallmarks of panniculitis are subcutaneous nodules or plaques, often located on the lower limb. A deep excisional biopsy is often required for a more precise diagnosis, given the often sparse and monotonous clinical symptoms. Erythema nodosum is the most common form and a typical example of septal panniculitis. It occurs in response to many different provoking factors, the most common trigger in children being a 'strep throat', in adults sarcoidosis. Clinically, it presents with a sudden symmetrical appearance of painful, tender, warm, erythematous nodes or plaques, usually on the shins, which resemble bruises. Classical and cutaneous polyarteriitis nodosa present a mostly septal panniculitis associated with vasculitis. Here subcutaneous, partially ulcerating nodules are surrounded by livedo racemosa. The mostly lobular panniculitides not associated with vasculitis include lupus panniculitis (lupus erythematosus profundus, typically with ensuing lipoatrophy and predilection for the upper part of the body), panniculitis in dermatomyositis (often calcifiying), cold panniculitis, pancreatic panniculitis, panniculitis due toα‎-antitrypsin deficiency, poststeroid panniculitis (in children after rapid withdrawal of corticosteroids), calciphylaxis (with and without renal failure), and factitious panniculitis (after mechanical, physical, or chemical injuries to the subcutaneous tissue, often self-inflicted). Nodular vasculitis (formerly erythema induratum Bazin) is a lobular panniculitis with vasculitis involving mostly the small blood vessels of the fat lobule. It appears to present a (hyper)reactive response to certain infections (tuberculosis, streptococci, candida) or to cold exposure or chronic venous insufficiency in susceptible females. In conclusion, the panniculitides are a heterogenous group of diseases requiring a systematic work-up and knowledge of certain histological or clinical criteria.
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Book chapters on the topic "Therapist warmth"

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Rigopoulos, Dimitris. "Warts." In Nail Therapies, 79–85. 2nd ed. Second edition. | Boca Raton : CRC Press, 2021. | Summary: “A succinct guide to treatment options, both medical and surgical, for both disorders and injuries of the nail”--Provided by publisher.: CRC Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1201/9781003159117-12-12.

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Hirai, Tatsuya, and Michael Goh. "Personal and Professional Characteristics of Japanese Master Therapists." In Expertise in Counseling and Psychotherapy, 155–94. Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med:psych/9780190222505.003.0006.

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This study explores the characteristics of 10 Japanese master therapists who gained the largest number of nominations from Japanese psychotherapists. Qualitative data analysis was processed utilizing the grounded theory approach and the consensual qualitative research method. Results clarified important characteristics of Japanese master therapists. First, as a foundation, they possess positive personality traits, such as modesty, warmth, sincerity, absence of self-centeredness, and resilience. Second, they possess an exceptional ability to perceive and process various cognitive and emotional information from the client, from the therapist him- or herself, and from the therapy process. Third, master therapists are able to continuously learn from their experiences, stimulated by their curiosity and creativity, as well as their sense of responsibility and discipline as professionals. Finally, cross-cultural comparison of Japanese and American master therapists are discussed, a model of master therapist development is proposed, and suggestions for future research and therapist training are offered.
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Lecomte, Tania, Claude Leclerc, and Til Wykes. "Therapist Competence: What Skills Are Needed to Conduct Group CBT for Psychosis?" In Group CBT for Psychosis, 124–32. Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med:psych/9780199391523.003.0013.

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This chapter defines what is meant by therapist competence, particularly regarding the three levels therapists need to address (i.e. the group, interpersonal and intrapersonal levels). The chapter also covers the typical clinician competencies such as empathy and warmth but also the skills necessary to conduct a group, such as time management, setting the agenda, using CBT techniques appropriately, flexibility, creativity, collaboration, and skillfully managing interactions in the group. This chapter will help clinicians better prepare themselves for running the group. We also describe existing measures for assessing therapist competence in CBT for psychosis, as well as in group CBT for psychosis.
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Truax, Charles B., and Robert Carkhuff. "Toward The Communication of Nonpossessive Warmth In The Therapist." In Toward Effective Counseling and Psychotherapy, 314–28. Routledge, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781351301480-13.

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Ellis, Albert. "Dilemmas in Giving Warmth or Love to Clients." In Therapists’ Dilemmas, 5–16. Taylor & Francis, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003070337-2.

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"Other home therapies." In Warts, 79–83. CRC Press, 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.3109/9780203011584-15.

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"Warts." In Nail Therapies, 45–49. CRC Press, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.3109/9781842145760-10.

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"Warts." In Nail Therapies, 45–49. Informa Healthcare, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.3109/9781842145760.008.

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Nanda, Sonali, Rachel Fayne, and Martin N. Zaiac. "Warts." In Therapies for Nail Disorders, 156–67. CRC Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1201/9780429428012-25.

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"Other office-based therapies: photodynamic therapy and hypnosis." In Warts, 153–57. CRC Press, 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.3109/9780203011584-26.

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Conference papers on the topic "Therapist warmth"

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Ahmadzadehfar, H., K. Rahbar, RP Baum, C. Gerke, C. Kratochwil, H. Ilhan, M. Sathekge, et al. "The impact of prior therapies on overall survival in mCRPC patients receiving Lu-PSMA-617 therapy. A WARMTH retrospective multicenter trial." In NuklearMedizin 2020. © Georg Thieme Verlag KG, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1055/s-0040-1708133.

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