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Self-Care for Clinicians in Training: A Guide to Psychological Wellness for Graduate Students in Psychology
Carter, Leigh A., Barnett, Jeffrey E.
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Description for Self-Care for Clinicians in Training: A Guide to Psychological Wellness for Graduate Students in Psychology
Paperback. Self-care for Clinicians in Training: A Guide to Psychological Wellness for Graduate Students in Psychology assists readers in recognizing the challenges and stressors common to being a graduate student and instructs them in maintaining a career-long lifestyle of self-care. Num Pages: 256 pages. BIC Classification: MMJ. Category: (UP) Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly. Dimension: 235 x 157 x 17. Weight in Grams: 342.
Self-care for Clinicians in Training: A Guide to Psychological Wellness for Graduate Students in Psychology assists readers in recognizing the challenges and stressors common to being a graduate student and instructs them in maintaining a career-long lifestyle of self-care. Successfully navigating graduate school requires much more than completing coursework and clinical experiences; graduate students in psychology make countless sacrifices and dedicate what may feel like a never-ending amount of time and energy in the pursuit of professional training. As such, many students put their own needs and well-being on hold or overlook them entirely. This can negatively impact coursework, clinical work, as well as one's relationships and health. This book teaches how to recognize risk factors that contribute to problems with psychological and emotional functioning and highlights preventative and reparative strategies that foster a lifestyle of self-care. The authors also encourage readers to consider self-care and psychological wellness beyond themselves, expanding to monitoring the well-being of peers and establishing cultures of self-care within their training programs. This book will be an essential resource to students in psychology graduate programs as well as those across the mental health professions
Product Details
Format
Paperback
Publication date
2014
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Condition
New
Number of Pages
256
Place of Publication
New York, United States
ISBN
9780199335350
SKU
V9780199335350
Shipping Time
Usually ships in 15 to 20 working days
Ref
99-99
About Carter, Leigh A., Barnett, Jeffrey E.
Leigh A. Carter, M.S., is a doctoral candidate in clinical psychology at Loyola University Maryland. She is a past board member of the American Psychological Association Advisory Committee on Colleague Assistance and the Maryland Psychological Association for Graduate Students. Her research interests focus on self-care and psychological wellness for students and professionals. Her current and previous clinical experiences include working in university counseling centers and employee assistance programs, where she incorporates her research on self-care. Jeffrey E. Barnett, Psy.D., ABPP, is a Professor and Associate Chair of the Department of Psychology at Loyola University Maryland as well as a licensed psychologist in independent practice. He is Board Certified in Clinical Psychology and in Clinical Child and Adolescent Psychology by the American Board of Professional Psychology and he is a Distinguished Practitioner in the National Academies of Practice.
Reviews for Self-Care for Clinicians in Training: A Guide to Psychological Wellness for Graduate Students in Psychology
Perhaps the most exciting book to date in the self-care field! So many of us can only wish we'd had such a guide as students. What a significant, state-of-the-art contribution to the field! The reality is that self-care is an ongoing lifespan practice, for each of us, as we evolve, personally and professionally. To have this information from which to build on across the course of one's life-what a priceless gift!
Ellen K. Baker, PhD, Author of Caring for Ourselves: A Therapist's Guide to Personal and Professional Well-Being
The authors take a compassionate look at the stresses associated with graduate study in psychology and argue convincingly for the importance of effective self-care. I strongly encourage current and perspective graduate students (and the faculty members who mentor them) to purchase and use this book.
Erica H. Wise, PhD, Clinical Professor and Director of the Psychology Clinic, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Beginning graduate school and entering a profession can be surprisingly stressful, especially for those who have been so successful in the past. Carter and Barnett place this very intimate journey in perspective, highlighting the importance of mentors, self-help activities, and a healthy lifestyle. This book meets a very important need for graduate students in the 'helping professions' and should be required reading in every graduate program.
Pat DeLeon, PhD, former President of the American Psychological Association
Self-Care for Clinicians in Training is a wonderful book that fills a major need. As the authors note, far too few training programs attend to self-care issues as part of clinical training, even as self-care is now identified as an ethical imperative for all psychotherapists. This workbook can be the trainee's companion across the entire graduate program and into the internship. It offers many self-assessment worksheets and a wealth of suggested strategies across many life domains. Well done!
Christine A. Courtois, PhD, ABPP, Psychologist, Private Practice, Washington, DC, and co-author, The Treatment of Complex Trauma, author, Healing the Incest Wound, and co-editor, Treating Complex Traumatic Stress Disorders
Ellen K. Baker, PhD, Author of Caring for Ourselves: A Therapist's Guide to Personal and Professional Well-Being
The authors take a compassionate look at the stresses associated with graduate study in psychology and argue convincingly for the importance of effective self-care. I strongly encourage current and perspective graduate students (and the faculty members who mentor them) to purchase and use this book.
Erica H. Wise, PhD, Clinical Professor and Director of the Psychology Clinic, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Beginning graduate school and entering a profession can be surprisingly stressful, especially for those who have been so successful in the past. Carter and Barnett place this very intimate journey in perspective, highlighting the importance of mentors, self-help activities, and a healthy lifestyle. This book meets a very important need for graduate students in the 'helping professions' and should be required reading in every graduate program.
Pat DeLeon, PhD, former President of the American Psychological Association
Self-Care for Clinicians in Training is a wonderful book that fills a major need. As the authors note, far too few training programs attend to self-care issues as part of clinical training, even as self-care is now identified as an ethical imperative for all psychotherapists. This workbook can be the trainee's companion across the entire graduate program and into the internship. It offers many self-assessment worksheets and a wealth of suggested strategies across many life domains. Well done!
Christine A. Courtois, PhD, ABPP, Psychologist, Private Practice, Washington, DC, and co-author, The Treatment of Complex Trauma, author, Healing the Incest Wound, and co-editor, Treating Complex Traumatic Stress Disorders