This timesaving resource features:
* Treatment plan components for 35 behaviorally based presenting
problems
* Over 1, 000 prewritten treatment goals, objectives, and
interventions–plus space to record your own treatment plan
options
* A step-by-step guide to writing treatment plans that meet the
requirements of most accrediting bodies, insurance companies, and
third-party payors
* Includes new Evidence-Based Practice Interventions as
required by many public funding sources and private insurers
Practice Planners¯® THE BESTSELLING
TREATMENT PLANNING SYSTEM FOR MENTAL HEALTH PROFESSIONALS
The Couples Psychotherapy Treatment Planner, Second
Edition provides all the elements necessary to quickly and
easily develop formal treatment plans that satisfy the demands of
HMOs, managed care companies, third-party payors, and state and
federal agencies.
* New edition features empirically supported, evidence-based
treatment interventions
* New chapters on Internet sexual use, retirement, and parenthood
strain
* Organized around 35 behaviorally based presenting problems
including jealousy, midlife crisis, parenting conflicts, and sexual
dysfunction
* Over 1, 000 prewritten treatment goals, objectives, and
interventions–plus space to record your own treatment plan
options
* Easy-to-use reference format helps locate treatment plan
components by behavioral problem
* Designed to correspond with The Couples Psychotherapy
Progress Notes Planner, Second Edition and Couples Therapy
Homework Planner, Second Edition
* Includes a sample treatment plan that conforms to the
requirements of most third-party payors and accrediting agencies
including CARF, The Joint Commission (TJC), COA, and the NCQA
Additional resources in the
Practice Planners¯® series:
Progress Notes Planners contain complete, prewritten
progress notes for each presenting problem in the companion
Treatment Planners.
Homework Planners feature behaviorally based, ready-to-use
assignments to speed treatment and keep clients engaged between
sessions.
For more information on our
Practice Planners¯®, including our full line
of Treatment Planners, visit us on the Web at:
www.wiley.com/practiceplanners
表中的内容
Practice Planners®
Series Preface xi
Acknowledgments xiii
Introduction 1
Sample Treatment Plan 10
Alcohol Abuse 14
Anger 23
Anxiety 33
Blame 43
Blended Family Problems 49
Communication 56
Dependency 65
Depression Due to Relationship Problems 72
Depression Independent of Relationship Problems 79
Disillusionment With Relationship 86
Eating Disorders 93
Financial Conflict 99
Infidelity 105
Internet Sexual Use 115
Intimate Partner Violence (IPV)–Intimate Terrorism 123
Intimate Partner Violence–Situational (Bi-Directional)
Couple Violence 133
Intolerance 141
Jealousy 151
Job Stress 161
Life-Changing Events 167
Loss of Love/Affection 173
Midlife Transition Problems 180
Only One Partner Willing to Attend Therapy 188
Parenting Conflicts–Adolescents 197
Parenting Conflicts–Children 207
Personality Differences 216
Psychological Abuse 220
Recreational Activities Dispute 227
Religious/Spirituality Differences 233
Retirement 241
Separation and Divorce 250
Sexual Abuse 260
Sexual Dysfunction 267
Transition to Parenthood Strains 274
Work/Home Role Strain 283
Appendix A: Bibliotherapy Suggestions 293
Appendix B: Professional References for Evidence-Based
Chapters 303
Appendix C: Recovery Model Objectives and Interventions
325
Appendix D: Situation
关于作者
ARTHUR E. JONGSMA, JR.,
PHD, is the Series Editor for the bestselling
Practice Planners¯®. Since 1971, he has
provided professional mental health services to both inpatient and
outpatient clients. He was the founder and director of
Psychological Consultants, a group private practice in Grand
Rapids, Michigan, for 25 years. He is the author or coauthor of
over 50 books on treatment planning and has conducted training
workshops for mental health professionals around the world.
K. DANIEL O’LEARY, PHD, is a Distinguished
Professor of Clinical Psychology in the Department of Psychology at
Stony Brook University, State University of New York. His current
research focuses on physical and psychological aggression in
intimate relations and factors in marriage that lead to clinical
depression.
RICHARD E. HEYMAN, PHD, is a Research
Professor of Clinical Psychology in the Department of Psychology at
Stony Brook University, State University of New York. Dr. Heyman’s
research program focuses on the development and maintenance of
family problems.