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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Martin Lakin (Professor of Psychology, Professor of Psychology, Duke University)Publisher: Oxford University Press Inc Imprint: Oxford University Press Inc Dimensions: Width: 16.40cm , Height: 2.20cm , Length: 24.30cm Weight: 0.538kg ISBN: 9780195044461ISBN 10: 0195044460 Pages: 192 Publication Date: 05 May 1988 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: To order ![]() Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us. Table of Contents1: Mental Health, Healing, and Ethical Values 2: The Uses of Persuasion in Psychotherapy 3: The Therapeutic Alliance 4: Individual Psychotherapy 5: Couple and Family Therapies 6: Group and Organization Therapies 7: Legal and Forensic Issues 8: Toward Ethical Psychotherapy PracticeReviewsA lucid and readable book. Lakin is thorough in his attention to the difficult issues raised by matters of religious faith, cultural affiliations, and traditional values. The strength of this book is that, like good therapy, it promotes understanding of the dilemmas faced by all concerned. * The British Journal of Psychiatry * """This book goes a long way toward identifying and addressing major ethical issues facing the practitioner of psychotherapy. Lakin even suggests that therapists can improve the quality of their services when they become interested in and concerned about about ethical issues related to their everyday practice. Covering a broad spectrum of topics, from the ethical challenges of individual psychotherapy to ethical issues with legal implications and the reverse, the book is comprehensive, well-researched, and accurate. Documentation by occasional patient vignettes enhances its authenticity."" --Guidepost ""Considerable help for students and practitioners alike. . . . Very useful and thought provoking."" --American Journal of Psychotherapy ""The book's strength is in its use of actual therapist-client interactions to illustrate problems. . . . Many of the ethical issues raised confront all health care practitioners to some extent; the problems for those in the mental health field are more difficult because there is no clear agreement on the goals and methods of therapy. This book helps raise these questions."" --Journal of Psychosocial Nursing ""A serious, relatively comprehensive, undogmatic, informed, and interesting discussion of the very pertinent area that it addresses. I recommend Ethical Issues in Psychotherapies to practitioners in the many precincts of psychotherapy."" --American Journal of Psychiatry ""The strength of this book lies in Lakin's ability to identify ethical issues others might well be insensitive to, and to analyse them from several perspectives. Also, he generally makes good use of the many excellent examples he has from the 100 interviews... A valuable new contribution to the field."" --Contemporary Psychology ""Timely and most welcome . . . . a book which practitioners should find refreshingly 'relevant'. It will also be welcomed by philosophical applied ethicists; although it contains little discussion of fundamental ethical principles, it is excellent as a sourcebook of what moral dilemmas confront real-life therapists in their practice."" --Bioethics ""This book goes a long way toward identifying and addressing major ethical issues facing the practitioner of psychotherapy. Lakin even suggests that therapists can improve the quality of their services when they become interested in and concerned about about ethical issues related to their everyday practice. Covering a broad spectrum of topics, from the ethical challenges of individual psychotherapy to ethical issues with legal implications and the reverse, the book is comprehensive, well-researched, and accurate. Documentation by occasional patient vignettes enhances its authenticity."" --Guidepost ""Considerable help for students and practitioners alike. . . . Very useful and thought provoking."" --American Journal of Psychotherapy ""The book's strength is in its use of actual therapist-client interactions to illustrate problems. . . . Many of the ethical issues raised confront all health care practitioners to some extent; the problems for those in the mental health field are more difficult because there is no clear agreement on the goals and methods of therapy. This book helps raise these questions."" --Journal of Psychosocial Nursing ""A serious, relatively comprehensive, undogmatic, informed, and interesting discussion of the very pertinent area that it addresses. I recommend Ethical Issues in Psychotherapies to practitioners in the many precincts of psychotherapy."" --American Journal of Psychiatry ""The strength of this book lies in Lakin's ability to identify ethical issues others might well be insensitive to, and to analyse them from several perspectives. Also, he generally makes good use of the many excellent examples he has from the 100 interviews... A valuable new contribution to the field."" --Contemporary Psychology ""Timely and most welcome . . . . a book which practitioners should find refreshingly 'relevant'. It will also be welcomed by philosophical applied ethicists; although it contains little discussion of fundamental ethical principles, it is excellent as a sourcebook of what moral dilemmas confront real-life therapists in their practice."" --Bioethics" Author InformationTab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |