Supervision is increasingly regarded as crucial in developing and maintaining adequate standards of CBT and there is an increased expectation that clinicians are offered sound support and guidance. This OCTC guide for clinicians will help you to develop as a CBT supervisor by introducing you to contemporary principles, frameworks and research along with a review of well-established principles of good practice and competencies in supervision. Helen Kennerley is a Consultant Clinical Psychologist with OCTC and Senior Associate Tutor with the University of Oxford. She is a founding fellow of OCTC and past Director of its Advanced Cognitive Therapy Studies Diploma/MSc course. She has written several books including a popular self-help guide to overcoming anxiety and has co-authored a best-selling guide to CBT for clinicians, both of which are commended by the British Medical Association. She has been voted one of the most influential female cognitive therapist in Britain by members of the British Association of Behavioural and Cognitive Psychotherapy
- Home
- Booklets
- CBT Supervision
Related products
-
Understanding Health Anxiety
Christine Kuchemann & Diana Sanders
Health anxiety and worry about physical symptoms is very common and distressing. Cognitive behaviour therapy can be very helpful and in this guide, Christine Kuchemann and Diana Sanders describe how to treat the problem. They describe a model of health anxiety to enable you to understand your concerns. The booklet goes through a number of methods, based on CBT, which you can use yourself or with the help of a therapist. Christine Küchemann was a clinical psychologist with Oxford Heal... READ MORE
Cost £5 Add to cart -
Keep safe and carry on: coping with suicidal feelings
Khadija Rouf
Suicidal feelings are not uncommon and in the extreme, people may feel that they have no alternative but to act on these. This booklet shows that there is hope for recovery by managing suicidal feelings in a range of ways. Based on the principles of cognitive behaviour therapy, it contains strategies from current research and best clinical practice. It is written to avoid jargon and can be useful to patients, family members, carers and clinicians alike. With practice, time and support, ... READ MORE
Cost £5 Add to cart -
Changing perfectionism
Sarah Egan, Roz Shafran & Tracey Wade
Perfectionism can be helpful but it can also be unhelpful. It is associated with a range of mental health problems and can interfere with many aspects of life. This booklet describes ‘clinical perfectionism’ and its link with how people evaluate themselves. It uses cognitive behavioural methods to help understand the nature of clinical perfectionism and what can be done to change it. Sarah Egan is the Director of Clinical Psychology at Curtin University, Australia and does research i... READ MORE
Cost £5 Add to cart -
Making sense of military trauma
Martina Martina Mueller and Paul Andrews
Whilst traumatic events can happen to anyone at any time, military deployments to conflict zones make this much more likely. Afterwards it can be hard to make sense of the experience particularly for a group of people who are used to self-reliance, minimizing and boxing things off. These strategies do work in the short term, but they don’t tend to be good long-term solutions. This booklet is co-written by a clinician and a former soldier and offers serving military personnel, veterans and... READ MORE
Cost £5 Add to cart