This new edition of Handbook of Mentalizing in Mental Health Practice reflects a vibrant field undergoing development along a number of dimensions important for mental health. As evidenced by the number of experts contributing chapters that focus on specialized approaches to mentalization-based treatment (MBT), the range of mental disorders for which this therapy has proved helpful has substantially increased, and now includes psychosis. Second, the range of contexts within which the approach has been shown to be of value has grown. MBT has been found to be useful in outpatient and community settings, and, more broadly, with children, adolescents, couples, and families, and the social contexts where they are found, such as in schools and even prisons. Finally, the framework has been shown to be generalizable to an understanding of the social context of mental health. The model advanced in this book goes beyond an understanding of the development of mentalizing and aims to provide an understanding of its role in a range of social processes. Key concepts, themes, and approaches clearly articulated throughout the book include the following: Mentalizing is a transdiagnostic concept applicable to a range of mental health conditions, including trauma, personality disorders, eating disorders, depression, substance use disorder, and psychosis. The chapters devoted to these disorders emphasize MBT skills acquisition and techniques for introducing mentalizing into psychotherapy. Mentalizing plays an important role in understanding how teams, systems, and services interact to facilitate or undermine interventions and service delivery. Chapters on mentalizing in teams and wider systems are included to help clinicians reduce negative impacts on clinical care and support reliable and responsive pathways to treatment. In an effort to encourage clinicians to integrate mentalizing into their clinical practice, empirical research on the developmental origins of mentalizing and how a focus on mentalizing can improve outcomes for patients is incorporated throughout the volume. Improved mentalizing increases resilience to adversity, perhaps protecting individuals from relapse, and improves therapeutic outcomes. The relevant research, as well as proven techniques for promoting resilience and trust, are discussed at length in the book. Finally, as an established component of the literature on neurobiology and higher-order cognition, mentalizing benefits from a number of different strands of research, ranging from neurobiology through child development to adult psychopathology. The book fully explores these relationships and their ramifications.
Authoritative, comprehensive, and cutting-edge, the Handbook of Mentalizing in Mental Health Practice is the single most important resource for clinicians and trainees learning about -- and incorporating -- MBT into their therapeutic repertoire.
- Preface
- Chapter 1. Introduction
- Chapter 2. Mentalization-Based Therapy in the Light of Contemporary Neuroscientific Research
- Chapter 3. Assessment of Mentalizing
- Chapter 4. Mentalizing, Resilience, and Epistemic Trust
- Chapter 5. Mentalizing and Trauma
- Chapter 6. Mentalization-Based Treatment: Individual Therapy Techniques
- Chapter 7. Mentalization-Based Group Therapy for Adults and Adolescents
- Chapter 8. Mentalization-Based Approaches to Working With Families
- Chapter 9. Mentalization-Based Couples Therapy
- Chapter 10. Mentalizing and Therapeutic Models
- Chapter 11. Mentalization-Based Creative Arts Therapies
- Chapter 12. Mentalization-Based Treatment in Partial Hospitalization Settings
- Chapter 13. AMBIT: From Worker and Client to Communities of Minds
- Chapter 14. Social Systems: Mentalizing Beyond the Microcosm of the Individual and Family
- Chapter 15. Mentalization-Based Treatment for Children
- Chapter 16. Mentalizing and Parenting
- Chapter 17. Borderline Personality Pathology in Adolescence
- Chapter 18. Conduct Disorder
- Chapter 19. Borderline Personality Disorder
- Chapter 20. Mentalization-Based Treatment for Antisocial Personality Disorder in Community and Prison Settings
- Chapter 21. Avoidant and Narcissistic Personality Disorder
- Chapter 22. Mentalization-Based Treatment for Eating Disorders
- Chapter 23. Mentalizing and Depression
- Chapter 24. Mentalizing and Substance Use Disorder
- Chapter 25. Psychosis: A Rationale for a Mentalization-Based Approach
This, the second edition of the Handbook of Mentalizing in Mental Health Practice, illustrates the vast growth in both research and clinical treatment on mentalization. As a transdiagnostic concept, the process of mentalizing is applicable to a wide variety of mental health conditions. This groundbreaking volume is an essential and timely Handbook that belongs in the libraries of all clinicians, regardless of their theoretical persuasion. The editors, Anthony Bateman and Peter Fonagy, deserve high praise for producing this major interdisciplinary work. I highly recommend it.
Produktdetaljer
Biografisk notat
Anthony Bateman, M.A., FRCPsych, is Consultant to the Anna Freud National Centre for Children and Families, London; Visiting Professor at University College London; and Honorary Affiliate Professor in Psychotherapy at the University of Copenhagen.Peter Fonagy, Ph.D., FBA, FMedSci, FAcSS, is Professor of Contemporary Psychoanalysis and Developmental Science at University College London.