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English
Oxford University Press
16 June 2010
Hallucinations are a troublesome and distressing symptom for countless patients who suffer from psychiatric or neurological conditions. In recent years, a number of new treatment strategies have been developed to help patients suffering from these symptoms. This book brings together the work of leading experts in this area, to provide a practical guide to the assessment, evaluation,

and treatment of hallucinations. It includes a range of interventions, including: Pharmacological, Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation, Cognitive Behavioural Therapy, Hallucinations focused Integrative Therapy (HIT), normalizing techniques, coping strategies, self-help approaches, Acceptance and Commitment Therapy, Attention Training Technique, Competitive Memory Training, appraisal-based cognitive therapy, and cognitive therapy for command hallucinations. As well as providing practical advice, the chapters also contain overviews of the respective areas of research, including references to the evidence base for each intervention - highlighting those interventions in need of more empirical support. Each chapter describes how to evaluate and treat the patient, often using clinical vignettes or case studies to illustrate the treatment process.

The book will be a valuable guide for psychiatrists, clinical psychologists, and counsellors, increasingly required to help patients suffering from these distressing symptoms.

Edited by:   , , ,
Imprint:   Oxford University Press
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Dimensions:   Height: 249mm,  Width: 177mm,  Spine: 28mm
Weight:   850g
ISBN:   9780199548590
ISBN 10:   0199548595
Pages:   418
Publication Date:  
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Undergraduate
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
1: Frank Larøi and André Aleman: Introduction 2: Julio Sanjuan, Eduardo J. Aguilar and Francesc Artigas: Pharmacological treatment of hallucinations 3: André Aleman and Ralph Hoffman: Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation 4: Ben Smith, Brendan O'Sullivan, Phillip Watson, Juliana Onwumere, Paul Bebbington, Philippa Garety, Daniel Freeman, David Fowler and Elizabeth Kuipers: Individual Cognitive Behavioural Therapy of auditory-verbal hallucinations 5: Louise Johns and Til Wykes: Group Cognitive Behavioural Therapy for psychosis 6: Peter Trower, Max Birchwood and Alan Meaden: Appraisals: Voices' power and purpose 7: Alan Meaden, Max Birchwood and Peter Trower: Cognitive therapy for command hallucinations 8: Lucia R. Valmaggia and Eric Morris: Attention Training Technique and Acceptance and Commitment Therapy for distressing auditory hallucinations 9: Mark van der Gaag and Kees Korrelboom: Competitive Memory Training 10: Jack A. Jenner: Hallucinations focused Integrative Therapy (HIT) 11: Michael Garrett: 'Normalizing' the voice hearing experience: The continuum between auditory hallucinations and ordinary mental life 12: John Farhall: Understanding and shaping adaptive coping with voices 13: Marius Romme and Sandra Escher: Personal history and hearing voices 14: Rufus May and Eleanor Longden: Self-help approaches to hearing voices 15: Jean-Louis Goëb and Renaud Jardri: Hallucinations in children and adolescents: Diagnosis and treatment strategies 16: Frank Eperjesi: Visual hallucinations in Charles Bonnet syndrome 17: Urs Peter Mosimann and Daniel Collerton: Hallucinations in the context of dementing illnesses 18: Gilles Fénelon: Hallucinations in Parkinson's Disease 19: Vaughan Bell, Andrea Raballo and Frank Larøi: Assessment of hallucinations

Frank Larøi obtained his BSc from the University of Bath, England; his degree in clinical psychology from the University of Oslo, Norway; and his PhD from the University of Liège, Belgium. In addition to hallucinations, his research interests include schizophrenia, delusions, cognitive remediation, awareness of illness, and emotional processing in psychopathology.; André Aleman is professor of cognitive neuropsychiatry at the University of Groningen. He obtained his MSc and PhD in neuropsychology from the University of Utrecht. In addition to hallucinations, his research interests include the cognitive and neural bases of emotional processing in psychopathology.

Reviews for Hallucinations: A Guide to Treatment and Management

<br>In short, Hallucinations: A Guide to Treatment and Management meets its goal. It offers a comprehensive review of a 'traditional' symptom that mobilizes basic and clinical research and generates model building, reviews current treament modalities, and looks confidently at the future. -- Renato D.Alarcon, MD, MPH, The Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease, Volume 200, Number 3<p><br>


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