This practical book provides effective strategies for helping therapy clients with anxiety resolve ambivalence and increase their intrinsic motivation for change. The author shows how to infuse the spirit and methods of motivational interviewing (MI) into cognitive-behavioral therapy or any other anxiety-focused treatment. She describes specific ways to use MI as a pretreatment intervention or integrate it throughout the course of therapy whenever motivational impasses occur. Vivid clinical material--including a chapter-length case example of a client presenting with anxiety and depression--enhances the utility of this accessible guide.
This book is in the Applications of Motivational Interviewing series, edited by Stephen Rollnick, William R. Miller, and Theresa B. Moyers.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
I. Integrating Motivational Interviewing into the Treatment of Anxiety and Related Problems
1. Where and Why Motivational Interviewing Fits
2. The Spirit of Motivational Interviewing
II. Assessing Readiness for Change
3. Observing Resistance
4. Asking About Readiness
III. Understanding Ambivalence and Building Resolve
5. Introduction to Working with Ambivalence
6. Understanding and Reframing Resistance to Change
7. Evoking and Elaborating Change Talk
8. Developing Discrepancy
IV. Extending Motivational Interviewing into the Action Phase
9. Evoking and Elaborating Client Expertise
10. Sharing Your Expertise
11. Listening Reflectively
12. Rolling with Resistance
V. Putting It All Together
13. Integrated Case Example
Epilogue. Training and Future Directions
Appendix. Resources and Recommended Readings
References
Index