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Crisis Intervention

Using Tipping Points to Achieve Transformative Change in Therapy

J. Scott Fraser

$175

Paperback

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English
American Psychological Association
11 February 2025
This book shows mental health providers how to envision crises as time-limited windows of opportunity-as tipping points clients can seize to achieve new insights and move in positive directions in their lives.

Aligns with APA Divisions 38 and 5 . 

Most mental health practitioners have been taught to do risk assessments and to reduce danger to their clients and those around them. However, many providers lack a thorough understanding of the cause and nature of mental health crises and struggle to safely and successfully provide crisis intervention. Instead of seeking to return clients in crisis to their previous baseline, providers can seize the opportunity presented by crises and tip them toward rapid resolution.

 

In Part One of the book, J. Scott Fraser outlines his Process of Change model, a clear and concrete approach to understanding crises in their proper context

engaging with clients through their values, culture, and language

honoring their goals

and breaking cycles of crisis for good. In Part Two, he shows how different types of crises-trauma, suicidality, grief, intimate partner violence, and sexual assault-reflect similar vicious cycles. Real life case studies illustrate the Process of Change model in action, demonstrating how each of those cycles can be tipped toward resolution by embracing the contextual process of change perspective.
By:  
Imprint:   American Psychological Association
Country of Publication:   United States
Dimensions:   Height: 229mm,  Width: 152mm, 
ISBN:   9781433843341
ISBN 10:   143384334X
Pages:   263
Publication Date:  
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Undergraduate
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active

J. Scott Fraser, PhD, is a clinical psychologist with nearly 4 years of clinical practice, supervision, training, and academic teaching. He has served as director of internship training, associate dean, and director of clinical training and as professor of clinical psychology in the doctoral program at the School of Professional Psychology at the Wright State University in Dayton, Ohio. Before that, he was director of a crisis/brief therapy center in a large general hospital setting for 4 years. He has published many papers and books, including Unifying Effective Psychotherapies: Tracing the Process of Change (APA Books, 2 8) and the DVD titled The Process of Change in Integrative Psychotherapy, which uses the process model described in this book.

Reviews for Crisis Intervention: Using Tipping Points to Achieve Transformative Change in Therapy

Scott Fraser provides kind, encouraging, and inspiring insight into the challenges of both psychotherapy and the essence of crisis intervention. Dr. Fraser amp rsquo s relatable book is highly readable and practical. It is an evidence-based yet efficient approach to treatment. The book is a new, more efficient approach to professional assistance. It amp rsquo s both helpful systematically and in practice guidelines, such as his process of change model. Highly recommended. - Charles R. Figley, PhD, Kurzweg Chair in Disaster Mental Health and School of Social Work, Tulane University, New Orleans, LA Drawing on his extensive experience, Scott Fraser rewards us with an innovative and far-reaching orientation to crisis. Fraser poses a striking challenge to common sense responses to crises and provides rich illustrations of his counterintuitive view in action. A useful and deeply engaging work. - Kenneth J. Gergen, PhD, Swarthmore College, Swarthmore, PA In his highly innovative volume, J. Scott Fraser offers a fresh, process-based approach to crisis intervention. His focus on tipping points, those critical moments of decision and change, aligns closely with what we know about the role of context, flexibility, and values in creating long-lasting change. This book invites practitioners to step into the dynamic flow of crises, not just to resolve them, but to use them as catalysts for growth. Fraser amp rsquo s work speaks to anyone willing to see crises as precious windows of opportunity and is a necessary read for practitioners wishing to deepen their work when everything is on the line. - Steven C. Hayes, PhD, Foundation Professor Emeritus, University of Nevada, Reno, and originator of acceptance and commitment therapy (ACT) The tipping point interventions and the process of change model presented in this book are inspiring ways to work with people in crisis situations for optimal outcomes. This book is a must-read for professionals who work with clients in crisis situations and want a new way forward. - Toni Zimmerman, PhD, LMFT, Professor, Human Development and Family Studies Department, and Program Director for the Marriage and Family Therapy Graduate Program, Colorado State University, Fort Collins Scott Fraser amp rsquo s Crisis Intervention fills a much-needed gap in the psychotherapy literature. Much of that work is grounded in the presumption that clinicians must slowly and methodically assess and plan, yet much of clinical practice requires great urgency. Fraser offers a new vision of how to proceed in the context of crisis, centered in an overarching process of change model that includes a systemic vision that extends beyond the individual, and a view in which crisis is not equated with disaster but as presenting opportunities for fundamental change. Well written and filled with illustrative examples, the book is authored by a skillful clinician who has worked for years in this context. I highly recommend this book to all practicing mental health professionals, and this should be essential reading for all students in training to be psychotherapists. - Jay Lebow, PhD, Clinical Professor and Senior Scholar, The Family Institute at Northwestern and Northwestern University, Evanston, IL This book masterfully extends the seminal Mental Research Institute brief therapy model to the arena of crisis intervention. Drawing on systemic and social constructivist ideas, Scott Fraser shows how crises such as trauma, suicidality, grief, domestic violence, and sexual assault present windows of opportunity for clinicians to tip vicious cycles of problem maintenance in new and positive directions through strategic, often counterintuitive intervention. - Michael J. Rohrbaugh, PhD, Professor Emeritus of Psychology, University of Arizona, Tucson


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