This is the first book to take a humanistic - person-centred/experiential - approach to counselling to the most commonly presenting client issue, depression. A landmark text, it establishes humanistic counselling as an evidence-based psychological intervention and is essential reading for trainees wishing to work in public health settings. Chapters cover:
· Evidence-based practice and person-centred and experiential therapies
· Counselling for Depression competence framework
· Working briefly
· the Counselling for Depression therapeutic stance
· In-depth case studies illustrating Counselling for Depression in practice
· Training, Supervision and Research.
The book further includes lists of CfD competences, research data supporting the approach, and sources used in developing the Humanistic Competence Framework
This will be vital reading for those taking CfD training or a humanistic counselling and psychotherapy course, as well as for those already working within the NHS wishing to enhance their practice.
Andy Hill is an accredited counsellor, an experienced trainer and Head of Research at the British Association for Counselling and Psychotherapy.
Pete Sanders is retired person-centred therapist, who now acts acts as a trainer, with a special interest in Pre Therapy. He founded PCCS training and PCCS books with his wife Maggie.
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This book is both timely and unique: it bridges theory and clinical practice by setting out a clear therapeutic model, detailing the competences that are employed to deliver counselling for depression, and describing how these are applied when working with clients. Specifying what “counselling” means in practice represents an enormous contribution to the field, and one that will be welcomed not only by practitioners and trainers, but also by researchers who wish to explore the effectiveness of this approach.
(Professor Tony Roth)This book is an essential guide to working with people who are depressed. It illuminates practice within the context of theory, research and NICE guidance. Although written primarily for counsellors and psychotherapists, others will find it invaluable; nurses, psychologists, mental health workers, GPs and more.
If you work with people who are depressed, read this book! It brings together practice, theory and research and links in to current NHS thinking and guidance without compromising the essential nature of therapy.
(Janet Tolan)
Pete Sanders and Andy Hill provide an elegant and sensitive drawing together of person-centred and experiential theory and therapy that results in a landmark text for practitioners delivering Counselling for Depression (CfD). Whether new to the field or an experienced practitioner, the book is both essential reading and an invaluable resource.
(Michael Barkham)Pete worked as a volunteer counsellor for ‘Off The Record’ in Newcastle-upon-Tyne in the early 1970s whilst a psychology undergraduate. This, and a full time Postgraduate Diploma in Counselling at the University of Aston in Birmingham in 1974/5, set him on his subsequent career as a counsellor, trainer, supervisor and author. During this time he was the course leader on three BACP recognised courses, was centrally involved in establishing and running the BACP Trainer Accreditation Scheme, wrote, co-wrote or edited 15 books, and founded PCCS Training and PCCS Books with his wife Maggie. Apart from his continuing interest in the development of theory and practice in person-centred and experiential therapies, he is dedicated to the demedicalisation of distress. Pete thinks that mental health services are in urgent need of reformation and is more likely to be found at a Hearing Voices Network conference than a BACP event. He is a Trustee of the Soteria Network, UK.
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