The Clinician's Guide to Collaborative Caring in Eating Disorders :The New Maudsley Method

4.00 ( 3 Ratings by Goodreads)
The Clinician's Guide to Collaborative Caring in Eating Disorders

The Clinician's Guide to Collaborative Caring in Eating Disorders :The New Maudsley Method

4.00 (3 Ratings by Goodreads)
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Published: 4 September, 2009
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Description

Caring for a loved one with an eating disorder is a difficult task; carers often find it hard to cope, and this can contribute to the maintenance of the disorder. The Clinician's Guide to Collaborative Caring in Eating Disorders shows how active collaboration between professional and non-professional carers can maximise the quality of life for both the sufferer and all other family members.

The book provides straightforward guidance for clinicians who work with families and carers. It suggests ways of ensuring that interpersonal elements that can maintain eating disorders are minimised and indicates skills and knowledge that can be taught to the carer for both managing their personal reaction to the illness, and for providing a practically and emotionally supportive environment that is conducive to change. The appendices of the book contain a Toolkit for Carers, a series of worksheets designed to help carers recognise their own unique caring styles.

This book is worthwhile reading for all health professionals working with people with eating disorders. It is relevant across a variety of settings and client groups including inpatients, out-patients, community and day patients.

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More Details

Type Book
ISBN13 9780415484251
ISBN10 0415484251
Number Of Pages 304
Item Weight 460 g
Publisher / Reseller Taylor & Francis Ltd
Format paperback
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Media Reviews

"This book is a valuable companion piece to Treasure et al.'s existing volume, providing useful information, resources and skills for clinicians. However, this book's biggest contribution is the way in which it stresses that clinicians should see the family as a resource (rather than a nuisance or an irrelevance)." - Professor Glenn Waller, Consultant Clinical Psychologist, Vincent Square Eating Disorders Service, CNWL NHS Foundation Trust, UK


"This book is a valuable companion piece to Treasure et al.'s existing volume, providing useful information, resources and skills for clinicians. However, this book's biggest contribution is the way in which it stresses that clinicians should see the family as a resource (rather than a nuisance or an irrelevance)." - Professor Glenn Waller, Consultant Clinical Psychologist, Vincent Square Eating Disorders Service, CNWL NHS Foundation Trust, UK

"This is an extremely well written, informative and practical book that should be essential reading for professionals working in the eating disorders field. Throughout, the thorny problem of how to facilitate change, whilst simultaneously avoiding the inadvertent guilt, is firmly grasped, with much practical advice and examples." – David Wood, Child & Adolescent Mental Health, 16 [1], Feb 2011

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GoodReads Reviews

Author's Bio

Janet Treasure is a Psychiatrist at the Maudsley Hospital and a Professor at King’s College London.

Ulrike Schmidt is a Consultant Psychiatrist at the Maudsley Hospital and a Professor at the Institute of Psychiatry, King’s College London.

Pam Macdonald is working on a PhD at the Institute of Psychiatry, King's College, London.

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