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The Adolescent Psychotherapy Treatment Planner. Edition No. 6. PracticePlanners

  • Book

  • 576 Pages
  • February 2024
  • John Wiley and Sons Ltd
  • ID: 5838343

Quickly and efficiently create treatment plans for adolescents in a variety of treatment environments

The newly revised sixth edition of the Adolescent Psychotherapy Treatment Planner delivers an essential resource for mental health practitioners seeking to create effective, high-quality treatment plans that satisfy the needs of most third-party payers and state and federal review agencies. This book clarifies, simplifies, and accelerates the treatment planning process for adolescents so you can spend less time on paperwork and more time treating your clients.

This latest edition includes comprehensive and up-to-date revisions on treating the victims and perpetrators of bullying and aggression, gender dysphoria, loneliness, opioid use, and sleep disorders. It includes new evidence-based objectives and interventions, as well as an expanded and updated professional references appendix.

You'll also find:

  • A new appendix presenting location and availability information in an alphabetical index of objective assessment instruments and structured clinical interviews
  • A consistent focus throughout the book on evidence-based practices and treatments consistent with practice guideline recommendations
  • Ranges of treatment options consistent with the best available research and those reflecting common clinical practices of experienced clinicians

An essential treatment planning handbook for clinicians treating adolescents in a variety of settings, the sixth edition of the Adolescent Psychotherapy Treatment Planner is the key to quickly and efficiently creating individually tailored, evidence-based, and effective treatment plans for adolescent clients.

Table of Contents

PracticePlanners® Series Preface ix

Acknowledgments xi

About the Companion Website xiii

Introduction 1

Academic Underachievement 16

Adoption 28

Anger Control Problems 39

Anxiety 53

Attention- Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) 64

Autism Spectrum Disorder 76

Bipolar Disorder 87

Blended Family 100

Bullying/Aggression Perpetrator 111

Bullying/Aggression Victim 123

Conduct Disorder/Delinquency 134

Depression - Unipolar 148

Divorce Reaction 161

Eating Disorder 172

Gender Dysphoria 185

Grief/Loss Unresolved 195

Intellectual Disability 205

Loneliness 216

Low Self- Esteem 227

Medical Condition 238

Negative Peer Influences 250

Obsessive- Compulsive Disorder (OCD) 263

Opioid Use 274

Oppositional Defiant Disorder (ODD) 286

Overweight/Obesity 299

Panic/Agoraphobia 311

Parenting 322

Peer/Sibling Conflict 334

Physical/Emotional Abuse Victim 344

Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) 355

Runaway 368

Schizophrenia Spectrum 379

Sexual Abuse Perpetrator 390

Sexual Abuse Victim 402

Sexual Orientation Confusion 413

Sexual Promiscuity 421

Sleep Disturbance 430

Social Anxiety 439

Specific Phobia 450

Substance Use 461

Suicidal Ideation 474

Appendix A: Bibliotherapy Suggestions 487

Appendix B: Clinical Resources for Therapists 516

Appendix C: Recovery Model Objectives and Interventions 546

Appendix D: Alphabetical Index of Sources for Assessment Instruments and Clinical Interview Forms Cited in Interventions 552 

Authors

Arthur E. Jongsma, Jr. Psychological Consultants, Grand Rapids, Michigan. L. Mark Peterson Bethany Christian Service's Residential Treatment & Family Counseling Prog., Grand Rapids, MI, USA. William P. McInnis Psychological Consultants, Grand Rapids, MI, USA. Timothy J. Bruce University of Illinois College of Medicine in Peoria, Illinois..