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Full Description
This book examines the critical function of being able to think and respond fluidly. Rigid patterns—like rumination, narrow ways of interpreting events, or behavioral avoidance—are often linked to problems such as anxiety, depression, eating disorders and obsessive compulsive spectrum disorders. Because of this, many effective therapies focus on helping people broaden their thinking and try new, healthier behaviors. This book brings together research from both science and clinical practice to explain what flexibility is and why it matters for mental health. It translates recent scientific findings into practical guidance for therapists and highlights current treatment approaches that target inflexible thinking and behavior.
Contents
Chapter 1: In(flexibility) in Depression and Suicide.- Chapter 2: Behavioral and Cognitive Flexibility in Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder.- Chapter 3: Translational Insights on Mechanisms of Psychological Inflexibility in Anxiety Disorders.- Chapter 4. Cognitive and Behavioral Inflexibility in Feeding and Eating Disorders.- Chapter 5. Emotion Regulation Flexibility and Borderline Personality Disorder.- Chapter 6. Obsessive Compulsive Personality Disorder: A Model of Inflexibility.- Chapter 7. Assessment of Cognitive and Behavioral Flexibility.- Chapter 8. Behavioral Activation Therapy for Depression.- Chapter 9. Exposure and Response Prevention for Obsessive Compulsive Disorder.- Chapter 10. The Unified Protocol for Emotional Disorders.- Chapter 11. Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Feeding and Eating Disorders.- Chapter 12. Dialectical Behavioral Therapy for Borderline Personality Disorder.- Chapter 13. Radically Open Dialectical Behavior Therapy for Disorders of Overcontrol.- Chapter 14. Cognitive Processing Therapy for Posttraumatic Stress Disorder.



