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Family Therapy - Concepts and Methods

Michael Göpfert
- Vol. 11, Iss: 2, pp 166-167
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TLDR
The Family Systems Test (FAST)Family TherapyThe Family CrucibleSystems Theory and Family TherapyHandbook of Bowen Family Systems Theory and Research MethodsStrengthening Family Resilience, Second Edition
Abstract
The Family Systems Test (FAST)Family TherapyThe Family CrucibleSystems Theory and Family TherapyHandbook of Bowen Family Systems Theory and Research MethodsStrengthening Family Resilience, Second EditionThe Righteous MindFamily Art TherapyStop Arguing with Your KidsHuman ServicesMarriage and Family Therapy, Second EditionFamily TherapyFamily TherapyResearch Methods in Family Therapy, Second EditionFamily TherapyThe Power of Family TherapyEncyclopedia of Couple and Family TherapyFamily TherapyFamily TherapyFamily TherapyInternal Family Systems Therapy, Second EditionEssential Skills in Family Therapy, Third EditionRe-Visioning Family Therapy, Third EditionTheory and Treatment Planning in Family Therapy: A Competency-Based ApproachThe Practice of Family TherapyDoing Family TherapyTechniques of Family TherapyThe Essentials of Family TherapyBrief Strategic Family TherapyGenograms: Assessment and TreatmentThe Essentials of Family TherapySourcebook of Family Theories and MethodsWriting MathematicallyThe Evaluation And Treatment Of Marital ConflictMarital TherapyFamily Therapy: Pearson New International EditionEncyclopedia of Behavioral MedicineThe Craft of Family TherapyIntroduction to Family CounselingFamily Therapy

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Citations
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The Indivisible Self: An Evidence-Based Model of Wellness (reprint)

Jane E. Myers
TL;DR: The Indivisible Self model as discussed by the authors is an evidence-based model of wellness, which emerged from factor analytic studies based on an earlier wellness model, the Wheel of Wellness, both models use Individual Psythology as an organizing theory; however, the current model exemplifies holism as the foundation of human wellness.
Journal ArticleDOI

Family Systems Theory, Attachment Theory, and Culture*

TL;DR: Evidence from Japan suggests that extremely close ties between mother and child are perceived as adaptive, and are more common, and that children experience less adverse effects from such relationships than do children in the West.
Journal ArticleDOI

The History of Couple Therapy: A Millennial Review

TL;DR: The history of research in the field is described as having passed through three phases: Phase I--A Technique in Search of Some Data, Phase II--Irrational(?) Exuberance, and Phase III--Caution and Extension (1993-present).
Journal ArticleDOI

Family-based therapy for adolescent drug abuse: knowns and unknowns

TL;DR: The results of 16 controlled trials and 4 therapy process studies from a treatment development perspective are reviewed, highlighting areas of progress and future research needs within the specialty of family-based therapy for adolescent drug abuse.
Journal ArticleDOI

Deconstructing Differentiation: Self Regulation, Interdependent Relating, and Well-Being in Adulthood

TL;DR: This paper examined the similarities between the Personal Authority in the Family System Questionnaire (PAFS) and the Differentiation of Self Inventory (DSI) and found that greater personal authority, intergenerational intimacy, and less inter-generational fusion on the PAFS and less emotional cutoff on the DSI predicted well-being among both women and men.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Posttraumatic growth in women with breast cancer and their husbands: An intersubjective validation study.

TL;DR: In this paper, the degree to which reports of posttraumatic growth by 41 women who survived breast cancer could be corroborated by their husbands was examined, and moderate positive correlations (r=.51, p<.01 for wives and r=.49, p <.

The Indivisible Self: An Evidence-Based Model of Wellness

Jane E. Myers
Abstract: The Indivisible Self, an evidence-based model of wellness, emerged from factor analytic studies based on an earlier wellness model, the Wheel of Wellness Both models use Individual Psychology as an organizing theory; however, the current model exemplifies holism as the foundation of human wellness In this article, the Indivisible Self model is described, and implications for counseling and needed research are provided
Journal ArticleDOI

The History of Couple Therapy: A Millennial Review

TL;DR: The history of research in the field is described as having passed through three phases: Phase I--A Technique in Search of Some Data, Phase II--Irrational(?) Exuberance, and Phase III--Caution and Extension (1993-present).
Journal ArticleDOI

Family-based therapy for adolescent drug abuse: knowns and unknowns

TL;DR: The results of 16 controlled trials and 4 therapy process studies from a treatment development perspective are reviewed, highlighting areas of progress and future research needs within the specialty of family-based therapy for adolescent drug abuse.
Journal ArticleDOI

Deconstructing Differentiation: Self Regulation, Interdependent Relating, and Well-Being in Adulthood

TL;DR: This paper examined the similarities between the Personal Authority in the Family System Questionnaire (PAFS) and the Differentiation of Self Inventory (DSI) and found that greater personal authority, intergenerational intimacy, and less inter-generational fusion on the PAFS and less emotional cutoff on the DSI predicted well-being among both women and men.