Treating Attachment Disorders
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AuteurKarl Heinz Brisch
- Uitgeverij-
- Jaar-
In Treating Attachment Disorders: From Theory to Therapy, Karl Heinz Brisch presents a comprehensive and practical guide to understanding and treating attachment disorders. Drawing on decades of clinical experience and research, Brisch integrates attachment theory with psychotherapeutic practice, offering a clear framework for diagnosis and intervention. The book begins with an overview of attachment theory, exploring how early caregiver relationships shape emotional development and can lead to disordered attachment patterns. Brisch then details various attachment disorders, including reactive attachment disorder and disinhibited social engagement disorder, providing vivid case examples that illustrate their manifestations in children and adults. The core of the text is devoted to treatment approaches, emphasizing the therapist's role as a secure base from which clients can explore and repair their attachment histories. Brisch describes phase-oriented therapy, starting with establishing safety and stabilization, then addressing traumatic memories, and finally fostering new attachment experiences. He discusses the importance of integrating body-oriented techniques, play therapy, and parent-child interventions. Throughout, the book underscores the need for a tailored, relationship-focused approach, highlighting how therapists can help clients develop more secure attachment patterns. Written in an accessible yet scholarly style, Treating Attachment Disorders is an essential resource for clinicians, students, and researchers seeking to deepen their understanding of attachment and its therapeutic applications. With its blend of theory, research, and clinical wisdom, this book offers invaluable guidance for anyone working with individuals affected by attachment disturbances.