The New Maudsley Skills-Based Training Manual
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Köp båda 2 för 944 kr"Caring for someone with an eating disorder is, without a doubt, a critical part in support of the recovery of the sufferer. Therefore, guiding and taking care of the carer have taken front-row seats in this process. The authors are leading authorities in this domain and Caring for a Loved One with an Eating Disorder, based on their The New Maudsley Model, is a very helpful session-by-session guide to participants and facilitators of skills workshops in order to train, equip, and support carers in their difficult task. This book is not only an outstanding go-to guide for carers and those who support carers, but it also will provide much-needed information to all clinicians who wish to better understand and support families and friends who are taking care of a loved one with an eating disorder." - Daniel Le Grange, Ph.D., FAED, Benioff UCSF Professor in Children's Health, Director, Eating Disorders Program, Department of Psychiatry and UCSF Weill Institute for Neurosciences, University of California, San Francisco, Emeritus Professor of Psychiatry and Behavioral Neuroscience, The University of Chicago, Chicago, IL. "Recognition of the importance of bringing carers and loved ones into treatment and attending to the burden on close family members has transformed the care of people with eating disorders across the age range and across the stages of the illness. This manual, born of years of personal and clinical experience of working with adults with eating disorders and substantiated by research, is an accessible guide for facilitators keen to put this knowledge into action through support of parents and carers based on the highly acclaimed Skills Based Caring for a Loved one with an Eating Disorder (The New Maudsley Method). Bursting with practical and creative ideas, peppered with top tips to help negotiate the challenging emotional nature of the work, and all underpinned by theory and research evidence in an easy to understand form, it provides a step by step yet flexible guide and toolkit for practitioners in delivering skills workshops for carers." - Dr Dasha Nicholls, Reader in Child Psychiatry, Imperial College London Chair, Eating Disorders Faculty, Royal College of Psychiatrists "The New Maudsley Model of sharing skills with carers has the potential to transform services and improve clinical outcomes. Building on the self help book, this is a brilliantly concise guide to delivering carer skills workshops, with session by session facilitator crib sheets, exercises and worksheets. More than anything, its the collaborative, empathic & non-judgemental style of delivery and interaction that matters - and it is this style that is described and attended to invaluably throughout the book. Helpful to all of us in our day to day work with carers." - Dr Frances Connan, PhD, Consultant Psychiatrist and Clinical Director for Vincent Square Eating Disorder Service "This ground-breaking book fills an important gap by providing a step by step guide for initiating and facilitating a skills workshop for caregivers of people of all ages living with eating disorders. With compassion, warmth, straightforward & non-blaming language, this must-read book provides both professional and non-professional carers with theories, practical strategies and hands on exercises to enhance communication and promote relational change. It brings hope about the possibility of transformation for all affected by eating disorders."- Gina Dimitropoulos, MSW, PhD, RSW, RMFT, social worker, family therapist and professional carer, University of Calgary "This is a book that the field has desperately neededa clear yet comprehensive guide to navigating an area too often relegated to being overwhelming in its complexity. With the key element of empowering carers, championed by Langley and her co-authors, it provides a set of tools that professionals, carers, and sufferers may all use to steer and enhanc
Jenny Langley is an experienced carer, trained by Gill Todd RMN, MSc to deliver the New Maudsley Carer Skills workshops in the community. She was awarded the Royal College of Psychiatrists Carer Contributor of the Year in 2016. Gill Todd was Clinical Nurse Leader for Eating Disorders at the Bethlem and Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust. Now retired from the NHS, she runs carers' skills workshops and trains facilitators to run the workshops. Janet Treasure is a leading figure in the field of eating disorders. She is a psychiatrist at South London and Maudsley Hospital, and is an international expert with extensive academic and clinical experience.
Contents Preface Section One Chapter 1 Introduction and background to skills-based caring Chapter 2 Practical issues for running the workshops Chapter 3 Facilitator delivery style, values and spirit Chapter 4 Facilitator guide to Motivational Interviewing and emotional processing Section Two Introduction Module 1 - Starting off and setting the scene for recovery 1.1. Welcoming the carers 1.2 Introductions 1.3 Agreeing ground rules for the group 1.4 Emotional response to caregiving 1.5 The Readiness Ruler 1.6 Working with a joint understanding basic facts and recovery Module 2 - Psychoeducation and developing empathy 2.1 Considering causes and maintaining factors 2.2 Considering ambivalence with a focus on the benefits of an ED 2.3 Understanding the trap of an eating disorder: the toxic effect of prolonged starvation and repeated habits 2.4 Building empathy for the challenges of weight restoration the metabolism effect 2.5 Building empathy for the sufferer coping strategies and the crap day exercise 2.6 Externalising the illness, part one: how have Edis personality traits changed through ED? 2.7 Externalising the illness, part two: introducing the red balloon/ blue balloon metaphor 2.8 Building empathy for the sufferer popping the balloon 2.9 Externalising the illness part three: visual exercise Module Three How the Eating Disorder Impacts on Interpersonal Relationships 3.1 Exploring the Animal Metaphors 3.2 Which 'Animals' Does Edi Interact with at Home and Outside the Home? 3.3 Considering How Edi Responds to the Animals 3.4 Creating a Productive Partnership Module Four The Cycle of Change and Introduction to Communication Skills 4.1 Stages of Change Model 4.2 Decisional Balance 4.3 Readiness Ruler and DARN-C 4.4 OARS (including LESS is More) 4.5 Advice giving Module Five Advanced Communication Skills 5.1 Emotional Intelligence 5.2 Emotion-Focused relationships using Attend, Label, Validate, Soothe (ALVS) 5.3 The Reassurance Trap and Rolling with Resistance 5.4 Five Key Principles: DEARS, Developing Discrepancy, Expressing Empathy, Amplifying Ambivalence, Rolling with Resistance, Supporting Self-efficacy 5.5 Ambivalence Empowering Carers When Edi is in Pre-Contemplation or Facing a Lapse When in Recovery 5.6 Hopelessness: Empowering Carers When Edi Feels it is All Too Much and May be Expressing Suicidal Ideation Module Six Working as a Herd of Elephants Collaboration Between All Carers 6.1 Making the Most of Family and Friends network 6.2 Partners, Single Parents and the Exhausted, Isolated Carer 6.3 Siblings and Peers 6.4 Making the Most of the GP Appointment 6.5 Going to A&E in an Emergency including Medical Risk Assessment 6.6 Collaborating with School/ Work/ University 6.7 Building Empathy with the Care Team the Changing Places Task 6.8 Encouraging Collaborative Care Using Motivational Language with the Care Team 6.9 Letter-writing to Repair Ruptured Relationships Module Seven Exercises for Carers to Plan for Change 7.1a Simple Reflection Exercises 7.1b Carers Reflecting on the Impact of ED on their Everyday Lives and Role-Modelling Self Care using SMART Baby Steps. 7.2 A Five-Step Approach to Planning for Change, Incorporating using a Spider diagram and Planning SMART Baby Steps 7.3 Completing the Accommodation and Enabling Scale for Eating Disorders 7.4 Accommodating Scenario Using OARS and the ABC Model 7.5 Enabling Scenario Using the ABC Model to Create a Menu of Options 7.6 Carers Managing Their Own Emotional Responses 7.7 Considering the Concept of Reasonable Risk 7.8 Coping Strategies for Carers Maintaining a Heathy Balance Module Eight - Coaching Edi to Make Their Own Changes 8.1 A Five-Step Approach to Plan for Behaviour Changes 8.2 Using the ABC model to Understand a Behaviour and Consider a Menu of Options 8.3 Using DARN-C to Elicit Change Talk