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Handbook of Spiritually Integrated Psychotherapies

Handbook of Spiritually Integrated Psychotherapies

This item is available to order.
Please allow 2-3 weeks for delivery.

Paperback / softback

£62.00

Publisher: American Psychological Association
ISBN: 9781433835926
Number of Pages: 473
Published: 28/02/2023
Width: 17.8 cm
Height: 25.4 cm

Spirituality-our relationship with the sacred-is expressed through our beliefs, practices, emotions, values, and relationships. Spirituality can play a vital role in understanding the problems clients face and the solutions they seek in psychotherapy.

This volume brings together top scholars who show how therapists can ethically and competently integrate spiritual perspectives and interventions into their practices and thereby more effectively treat clients from diverse religious, spiritual, racial, and cultural backgrounds.

The chapters present research, clinical guidance, and case studies representing a wide variety of approaches and settings, including community mental health centers, private practice offices, hospitals and medical clinics, universities, and prisons.

Given the important role that spirituality plays in many people amp rsquo s lives, this book will help practitioners bring attention, sensitivity, and evidence-based knowledge about the spiritual dimension into their psychotherapy practice.

Contributors
Acknowledgments
Chapter : Introduction: Bringing Spiritually Integrated Psychotherapies Into the Health Care Mainstream 
P. Scott Richards, Kenneth I. Pargament, Julie J.  Exline, and G. E. Kawika Allen 
 
Part I. General Approaches for Spiritually Integrated Psychotherapy
 
Chapter 2: Culturally Informed Therapy: An Intervention That Addresses the Psychological Needs of Religious Individuals of Diverse Identities 
Amy Weisman de Mamani, Olivia Altamirano, Daisy Lopez, Merranda Marie McLaughlin, Jessica Maura, Ana Martinez de Andino, Salman Shaheen Ahmad, Laurinda Hafner, and Sarah Griffith Lund
 
Chapter 3: Providing a Secure Base: Facilitating a Secure Attachment to God in Psychotherapy 
Suzanne Nortier Hollman and Cheri Marmarosh
 

Chapter 4: Relational Spirituality Model in Psychotherapy: Overview and Case Application 
Steven J. Sandage and George S. Stavros 
 

Chapter 5: Postsecular, Spiritually Integrated Gestalt Therapy 
Philip Brownell and Jelena Zeleskov Doric
 
Chapter : Shaken to the Core: Understanding and Addressing Spiritual Struggles in Psychotherapy 
Kenneth I. Pargament and Julie J.  Exline 
 
Chapter 7: A Spiritually Inclusive Theistic Approach to Psychotherapy in Inpatient, Residential, and Outpatient Settings 
Michael E. Berrett, Randy K. Hardman, and P. Scott Richards    

Chapter 8: SPIRIT: Spiritual Psychotherapy for Inpatient, Residential, and Intensive Treatment 
Sarah Salcone and David H. Rosmarin 
 

Chapter 9: Religiously Accommodative and Integrative Rational Emotive Behavior Therapy 
Stevan Lars Nielsen, Dane D. B. Abegg, Brodrick T. Brown, David M. Erekson, Rachel A. Hamilton, and Sarah E. Lindsey 
 
Part II. Integrating Specific Spiritual Traditions Into Psychotherapy
 
Chapter : Theoretical Foundations and Clinical Applications of Traditional Islamically Integrated Psychotherapy 
Fahad Khan and Hooman Keshavarzi 
 
Chapter : Gospel-Centered Integrative Framework for Therapy: Foundation, Description, Research Findings, and Application 
Elena E. Kim, Judy Cha, and Timothy Keller 
 

Chapter 2: Gestalt Pastoral Care: An Opening to Grace 
Tilda Norberg, David Janvier, Wanda Craner, Lyn Barrett, Michael Crabtree, Michelle Zechner, and Mark Thomas 
 
Chapter 3: Spiritually Integrated Psychotherapy Among Catholics: A Practice-Based International Investigation 
Jeong Yeon Hwang and Wonjin Sim
 
Chapter 4: Jewish Forms of Spiritually Integrated Psychotherapy in Israel 
Ofra Mayseless, Marianna Ruah-Midbar Shapiro, Aya Rice, and Liat Zucker
 
Chapter 5: Sufi Psychology: A Heart-Centered Paradigm 
Saloumeh DeGood
 
Chapter : Christian-Based Spiritually Integrated Psychotherapy for East Asian Canadians and Findings From the CSPEARIT study
Wai Lun Alan Fung, Purple Yip, Sheila Stevens, Tat-Ying Wong, Yeun-Hee Natalie Yoo, Nancy Ross, Helen Noh, and Taryn Tang 
 
Chapter 7: A Polynesian Perspective for Navigating the Spiritual Connections in Psychotherapy Practice 
Alayne Mikahere-Hall, Hoku Conklin, and G. E. Kawika Allen
 
Part III. Spiritually Integrated Psychotherapy for Specific Patient Populations
 
Chapter 8: Spiritually Integrated Couple Therapy 
Everett L. Worthington, Jr., Jennifer S. Ripley, Zhuo Job Chen, Vanessa M. Kent, and Elizabeth Loewer 
 
Chapter 9: REACH Forgiveness in Couple, Group, and Individual Psychotherapy  
Everett L. Worthington, Jr. 
 
Chapter 2 : Search for Meaning: A Spiritually Integrated Approach for Treating Veterans With Posttraumatic Stress Disorder
Clyde T. Angel, John E. Sullivan, and Vincent R. Starnino
 
Chapter 2 : Spiritually Focused, Multiculturally Oriented Psychotherapy in the Criminal Justice Detention System 
Jennifer Gafford, Courtney Agorsor, Don Davis, Joshua Hook, Cirleen DeBlaere, Sree Sinha, Jeremy Coleman, Emma Porter, and Jesse Owen 
 
Part IV. Mainstreaming Spiritually Integrated Psychotherapies
 
Chapter 22: Training Opportunities and Resources for Spiritually Integrated Psychotherapists and Researchers 
P. Scott Richards, Joseph M. Currier, Russell Siler Jones, Michelle Pearce, and Douglas Stephens

Index
About the Editors

P. Scott Richards, G. E. Kawika Allen, Daniel Judd

P. Scott Richards is the President/CEO of Bridges Psychotherapy Solutions, LLC. He is a retired professor of counseling psychology at Brigham Young University. He is past president and fellow of the Psychology of Religion and Spirituality division of the American Psychological Association (APA) and a Fellow of the Society for the Advancement of Psychotherapy of APA. He is the author of six APA books about spirituality and psychotherapy. He was the Principal Investigator of a $3.57 million-dollar grant from the John Templeton Foundation about spiritual integrated psychotherapies, which was completed in 2 2 . Visit https://bridgesps.com.
 
G. E. Kawika Allen is an assistant professor of counseling psychology at Brigham Young University. He has published over 2 peer-reviewed research articles about Polynesian psychology and culture, psychology of religion, and spiritual aspects of diversity. He is secretary of Division 45 of the American Psychological Association. He was a project co-director of the grant from the John Templeton Foundation.
 
Daniel K Judd is a retired professor and former dean of religious education at Brigham Young University. Dr. Judd has a doctorate degree in counseling psychology. He is a researcher, educator, psychologist, and pastoral professional. He was project co-director of the grant from the John Templeton Foundation. He is the author of several books and numerous journal articles about religion and mental health, including his recent book, Let's Talk About Religion and Mental Health (Deseret Book, 2 2 ).