Treating Bipolar Disorder: A Clinician's Guide to Interpersonal and Social Rhythm TherapyThis innovative manual presents a powerful approach for helping people manage bipolar illness and protect against the recurrence of manic or depressive episodes. Interpersonal and social rhythm therapy focuses on stabilizing moods by improving medication adherence, building coping skills and relationship satisfaction, and shoring up the regularity of daily rhythms or routines. Each phase of this flexible, evidence-based treatment is vividly detailed, from screening, assessment, and case conceptualization through acute therapy, maintenance treatment, and periodic booster sessions. Among the special features are reproducible assessment tools and a chapter on how to overcome specific treatment challenges. |
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Contents
Where Interpersonal and Social Rhythm Therapy Came From | 1 |
ONEThe Patients | 5 |
TWOEmpirically Supported Theories of Bipolar Disorder and the Etiology of Bipolar Episodes | 16 |
THREEEmpirically Supported Therapies for Bipolar Disorder | 27 |
FOURA Brief Overview of Interpersonal and Social Rhythm Therapy | 43 |
FIVEAssessment of Bipolar Disorders and Common Comorbidities | 50 |
History Taking and the Interpersonal Inventory | 63 |
SEVENOrienting the Patient to Treatment and Individualized Treatment Planning | 84 |
Other Useful Interventions | 119 |
ELEVENMonitoring Progress and Enhancing Treatment Adherence | 127 |
TWELVEThe Therapeutic Relationship in Interpersonal and Social Rhythm Therapy | 138 |
THIRTEENPoor Outcome and How to Handle It | 145 |
FOURTEENTapering or Concluding Treatment | 157 |
Appendices | 163 |
198 | |
208 | |
Stabilizing Social Rhythms and Behavioral Activation | 92 |
NINEIntervening in Interpersonal Problem Areas | 103 |
Other editions - View all
Treating Bipolar Disorder: A Clinician's Guide to Interpersonal and Social ... Ellen Frank No preview available - 2005 |
Common terms and phrases
A.M. On day able activities acute ADHD antidepressant assessment associated behavior bipolar depression bipolar disorder bipolar illness bipolar patients borderline personality disorder changes circadian rhythms clinical clinician cognitive therapy comorbid complete depressive episodes episode of mania episodes of illness EXAMPLE family members feel focus focused functioning goals grief help your patient hospital hypomania hypomanic important improve individuals with bipolar initial interpersonal deficits interpersonal inventory interpersonal problem area interpersonal relationships intervention involved IPSRT therapist IPSRT treatment Jill Jill’s Kupfer lamotrigine Later Exact later later time Check lithium lost healthy manic episode medication ment Miklowitz monitoring mood disorders mood episodes mood stabilizer onset parents patients with bipolar person pharmacotherapy phase Psychiatry psychoeducation Psychopharmacology psychosocial psychotherapy regimen regular relapse relationship rhythm disruption role dispute role transition routines sessions side effects sleep Social Rhythm Therapy social zeitgebers symptomatology therapeutic tient tion treatment of bipolar unipolar zeitgebers
Popular passages
Page 198 - Sachs G, et al. A placebo-controlled 18-month trial of lamotrigine and lithium maintenance treatment in recently manic or hypomanic patients with bipolar I disorder.