Skip to main content
Springer Publishing
Site Menu
  • Browse by subjectSubjectsBrowse by subject
    • Medicine
    • Nursing
    • Physician Assistant
    • Behavioral Sciences
    • Health Sciences
  • What we publish
    • Books
    • Journals
    • Reference
  • Information forInformationInformation for
    • Students
    • Educators
    • Institutions
    • Authors
    • Societies
    • Advertisers
  • About
  • Help
  •   0 items You have 0 items in your shopping cart. Click to view details.   My account
Springer Publishing
  My account

Main navigation

Main Navigation

  • Browse by subjectSubjectsBrowse by subject
    • Medicine
    • Nursing
    • Physician Assistant
    • Behavioral Sciences
    • Health Sciences
  • What we publish
    • Books
    • Journals
    • Reference
  • Information forInformationInformation for
    • Students
    • Educators
    • Institutions
    • Authors
    • Societies
    • Advertisers

Secondary Navigation

  •   0 items You have 0 items in your shopping cart. Click to view details.
  • About
  • Help
 filters 

Your search for all content returned 244 results

Include content types...

    • Reference Work 0
    • Quick Reference 9
    • Procedure 0
    • Prescribing Guideline 0
    • Patient Education 0
    • Journals 0
    • Journal Articles 6
    • Clinical Guideline 0
    • Books 18
    • Book Chapters 211

Filter results by...

Filter by keyword

    • Mental Disorders
    • older adults
    • Counseling 523
    • Mental Health 397
    • EMDR 329
    • Eye Movement Desensitization Reprocessing 328
    • Social Workers 287
    • intimate partner violence 280
    • caring 261
    • Social Work 237
    • Aged 227
    • mental health 225
    • Psychotherapy 225
    • Psychology 209
    • Disabled Persons 200
    • Delivery of Health Care 197
    • Aging 195
    • Counselors 193
    • eye movement desensitization and reprocessing 183
    • trauma 182
    • depression 177
    • Health Personnel 171
    • Cognitive Therapy 163
    • Rehabilitation 163
    • Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic 161
    • psychotherapy 158
    • social workers 156
    • domestic violence 155
    • posttraumatic stress disorder 154
    • Child 151
    • Substance-Related Disorders 151
    • Wounds and Injuries 151
    • Caring 150
    • Family 150
    • PTSD 148
    • Adolescent 146
    • Cognition 140
    • cognitive behavioral therapy 138
    • anxiety 135
    • counseling 135
    • Emotions 135
    • Students 129
    • Mental Disorders 127
    • INTIMATE PARTNER VIOLENCE 121
    • Evidence-Based Practice 120
    • older adults 120
    • adolescents 118
    • Social Justice 117
    • aging 114
    • Depression 112
    • Schools 111
    • Psychological Trauma 109
  • Mental Disorders
  • older adults

Filter by author

    • Yochim, Brian P. 4
    • Baker, Hallie E. 3
    • Harley, Debra A. 3
    • Karasik, Rona J. 3
    • Woodhead, Erin L. 3
    • Baldo, Juliana 2
    • Brown, Preston 2
    • Clark, Victoria 2
    • Fairchild, J. Kaci 2
    • Gibson, Sheri 2
    • Greenberg, Phyllis A. 2
    • Haws, Kari A. 2
    • Hiroto, Kimberly E. 2
    • Killam, Wendy K. 2
    • Kwan, Victor 2
    • Lake, Elizabeth 2
    • Lim, Magdalene 2
    • Mead, Christie 2
    • Miller, Eva 2
    • Niles-Yokum, Kelly 2
    • Reid, Chuck 2
    • Rickards, Tyler A. 2
    • Teaster, Pamela B. 2
    • Varnado, Melanie B. 2
    • Weber, Bill 2
    • Williams, Kimberly A. 2
    • Wilson, Keren Brown 2
    • Yarry, Sarah J. 2
    • Youdin, Robert 2
    • Ysasi, Noel A. 2
    • A. Sidani, Mohamad 1
    • Abdi, Beheshteh 1
    • Acevedo, Gregory 1
    • Ackerman, Alissa R. 1
    • Adams, Jennifer R. 1
    • Ahmetoglu, Gorkan 1
    • Alekseyev, Kirill 1
    • Alexander-Albritton, Carrie 1
    • Alonzo, Dana 1
    • Alston, Paul P. 1
    • Alston, Reginald J. 1
    • Altman, Nancy J. 1
    • Aminbakhsh, Roxana 1
    • Andreoletti, Carrie 1
    • Arellano-Morales, Leticia 1
    • Armstrong, Stephen A. 1
    • B. Rodríguez-Galán, Marta 1
    • Bailey, Tamba-Kuii M. 1
    • BERRY, DAVID T. R. 1
    • BOUQUET, CHELSEA M. 1

Filter by book / journal title

    • Clinical Gerontological Social Work Practice 10
    • Introduction to Aging: A Positive, Interdisciplinary Approach 9
    • Psychology of Aging: A Biopsychosocial Perspective 9
    • The Encyclopedia of Elder Care: The Comprehensive Resource on Geriatric Health and Social Care 9
    • Handbook of Minority Aging 8
    • Handbook of Theories of Aging 8
    • Healing Addiction with EMDR Therapy: A Trauma-Focused Guide 8
    • Social Policy for an Aging Society: A Human Rights Perspective 8
    • Social Work and Mental Health: Evidence-Based Policy and Practice 8
    • A Hands-On Approach to Teaching About Aging: 32 Activities for the Classroom and Beyond 6
    • Applied Biological Psychology 6
    • Psychology of Aging 101 6
    • Social Isolation of Older Adults: Strategies to Bolster Health and Well-Being 6
    • Suicide Assessment and Treatment: Empirical and Evidence-Based Practices 6
    • The Aging Networks: A Guide to Policy, Programs, and Services 6
    • A Guide for Nursing Home Social Workers 5
    • Health Promotion and Aging: Practical Applications for Health Professionals 4
    • Medical Aspects of Disability for the Rehabilitation Professional 4
    • Child Welfare in the United States: Challenges, Policy, and Practice 3
    • Creativity 101 3
    • Disability Studies for Human Services: An Interdisciplinary and Intersectionality Approach 3
    • Disasters and Vulnerable Populations: Evidence-Based Practice for the Helping Professions 3
    • Personality 101 3
    • Rehabilitation Counseling and Emerging Disabilities: Medical, Psychosocial, and Vocational Aspects 3
    • Strengthening the DSM®: Incorporating Intersectionality, Resilience, and Cultural Competence 3
    • The Psychosis Response Guide: How to Help Young People in Psychiatric Crises 3
    • Career Counseling Interventions: Practice With Diverse Clients 2
    • Elder Justice, Ageism, and Elder Abuse 2
    • History of Psychology 101 2
    • Homeless Older Populations: A Practical Guide for the Interdisciplinary Care Team 2
    • International Journal for Human Caring 2
    • Journal of Cognitive Psychotherapy 2
    • Mindfulness and Yoga in Schools: A Guide for Teachers and Practitioners 2
    • Policy and Program Planning for Older Adults and People With Disabilities: Practice Realities and Visions 2
    • Sex Offender Laws: Failed Policies, New Directions 2
    • The Neuropsychology of Cortical Dementias: Contemporary Neuropsychology Series 2
    • The Professional Counselor’s Desk Reference 2
    • Theories of Counseling and Psychotherapy: Individual and Relational Approaches 2
    • What Every Mental Health Professional Needs to Know About Sex 2
    • A Clinician’s Guide for Treating Active Military and Veteran Populations with EMDR Therapy 1
    • A Guide to the Standard EMDR Therapy Protocols for Clinicians, Supervisors, and Consultants 1
    • Acquired Brain Injury: Clinical Essentials for Neurotrauma and Rehabilitation Professionals 1
    • Addiction Counseling: A Practical Approach 1
    • African American Psychology: A Positive Psychology Perspective 1
    • Aging, Society, and the Life Course 1
    • Assessing Dangerousness: Domestic Violence Offenders and Child Abusers 1
    • Career Development, Employment, and Disability in Rehabilitation: From Theory to Practice 1
    • Child and Adolescent Psychopathology for School Psychology: A Practical Approach 1
    • Clinical Mental Health Counseling: Practicing in Integrated Systems of Care 1
    • Clinician’s Guide to Partial Hospitalization and Intensive Outpatient Practice 1

Filter by subject

    • Behavioral Sciences
    • Medicine 33
      • Neurology 10
        • Exam Prep and Study Tools 0
      • Oncology 15
        • Medical Oncology 12
        • Radiation Oncology 1
        • Exam Prep and Study Tools 0
      • Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation 10
        • Exam Prep and Study Tools 0
      • Other Specialties 1
    • Nursing 374
      • Administration, Management, and Leadership 30
      • Advanced Practice 130
        • Critical Care, Acute Care, and Emergency 0
        • Family and Adult-Gerontology Primary Care 49
        • Pediatrics and Neonatal 23
        • Women's Health, Obstetrics, and Midwifery 3
        • Other 29
      • Clinical Nursing 25
      • Critical Care, Acute Care, and Emergency 92
      • Geriatrics and Gerontology 135
      • Doctor of Nursing Practice 23
      • Nursing Education 42
      • Professional Issues and Trends 54
      • Research, Theory, and Measurement 19
      • Undergraduate Nursing 15
      • Special Topics 13
      • Exam Prep and Study Tools 9
    • Physician Assistant 18
    • Behavioral Sciences 244
      • Counseling 65
        • General Counseling 6
        • Marriage and Family Counseling 10
        • Mental Health Counseling 27
        • Rehabilitation Counseling 16
        • School Counseling 3
        • Exam Prep and Study Tools 12
      • Gerontology 94
        • Adult Development and Aging 36
        • Biopsychosocial 4
        • Global and Comparative Aging 17
        • Research 10
        • Service and Program Development 3
        • Exam Prep and Study Tools 0
      • Psychology 83
        • Applied Psychology 10
        • Clinical and Counseling Psychology 33
        • Cognitive, Biological, and Neurological Psychology 8
        • Developmental Psychology 2
        • General Psychology 20
        • School and Educational Psychology 1
        • Social and Personality Psychology 21
        • Exam Prep and Study Tools 0
      • Social Work 55
        • Administration and Management 1
        • Policy, Social Justice, and Human Rights 7
        • Theory, Practice, and Skills 28
        • Exam Prep and Study Tools 2
    • Health Sciences 40
      • Health Care Administration and Management 10
      • Public Health 28
  • Behavioral Sciences
Include options
Please enter years in the form YYYY
  • Save search

Your search for all content returned 244 results

Order by: Relevance | Title | Date
Show 10 | 50 | 100 per page
  • Evidence-Based Interventions for Children and Adolescents of Divorced ParentsGo to chapter: Evidence-Based Interventions for Children and Adolescents of Divorced Parents

    Evidence-Based Interventions for Children and Adolescents of Divorced Parents

    Chapter

    Divorce is a lengthy developmental process and, in the case of children and adolescents, one that can encompass most of their young lives. This chapter explores the experience of divorce from the perspective of the children, reviews the evidence base and empirical support for interventions. It provides examples of three evidence-based intervention programs, namely, Children in Between, Children of Divorce Intervention Program (CODIP), and New Beginnings, appropriate for use with children, adolescents, and their parents. Promoting protective factors and limiting risk factors during childhood and adolescence can prevent many mental, emotional, and behavioral problems and disorders during those years and into adulthood. The Children in Between program is listed on the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) National Registry of Evidence-Based Programs and Practices. The CODIP and the New Beginnings program are also listed on the SAMHSA National Registry of Evidence-Based Programs and Practices.

    Source:
    Handbook of Evidence-Based Interventions for Children and Adolescents
  • Creativity and Mental HealthGo to chapter: Creativity and Mental Health

    Creativity and Mental Health

    Chapter

    This chapter explores three ’classic’ studies of creativity and mental illness. The first is Jamison whose focus is on the connection between bipolar disorder and creativity. The second is Andreasen, who used structured interviews to analyze 30 creative writers, 30 matched controls, and first-degree relatives of each group. The writers had a higher rate of mental illness, with a particular tendency toward bipolar and other affective disorders. The third major work is Ludwig, who utilized the historiometric technique. All three studies have come under serious criticism. Many of the studies of Big-C creators are historiometric, akin to Ludwig’s work. Some such studies claim that eminent creators show higher rates of mental illness. A much more common approach is to look at everyday people and give them measures of creativity and mental health. Typically, researchers look at what are called subclinical disorders—in other words, they’re not clinically significant.

    Source:
    Creativity 101
  • Creative Perceptions (of Self and Others)Go to chapter: Creative Perceptions (of Self and Others)

    Creative Perceptions (of Self and Others)

    Chapter

    Creative people are also often seen as being outsiders and eccentric. Sen and Sharma’s examination of creativity beliefs in India tested beliefs about the Four P’s and found that creativity was more likely to be described as a holistic essence of an individual, and less likely to be focused on the product or process. Romo and Alfonso studied Spanish painters and found that one of the implicit theories that the painters held about creativity involved the role of psychological disorders. Plucker and Dana found that past histories of alcohol, marijuana, and tobacco usage were not correlated with creative achievements; familial drug and alcohol use also was not significantly associated with creative accomplishments or creative personality attributes. Humphrey, McKay, Primi, and Kaufman did find that illegal drug use predicted self-reported creative behaviors even when openness to experience was controlled.

    Source:
    Creativity 101
  • Psychopathological Problems in Older AdultsGo to chapter: Psychopathological Problems in Older Adults

    Psychopathological Problems in Older Adults

    Chapter

    The medical model in psychiatry assumes medical intervention is the treatment of choice for the constellations of diagnosed symptoms that comprise various mental disorders. These treatments may include pharmacotherapy, electroconvulsive treatment, brain stimulation, and psychosurgery. Therefore, psychopharmacology for older adults can be considered palliative rather than a cure for a brain disease causing psychopathology. Older adults experience many psychopathological problems, including anorexia tardive, anxiety disorders, delusional disorders, mood disorders, personality disorders, schizophrenia, and co-occurring disorders with substance abuse/dependence disorders. Therefore, it is critical for the social worker to understand the various manifestations of psychological problems in older adults from the perspective of an older adult, rather than extrapolating information commonly taught in social work programs that neglect to focus on older adults and restrict teaching to psycho-pathological problems in younger and middle-aged adults.

    Source:
    Clinical Gerontological Social Work Practice
  • Dying and DeathGo to chapter: Dying and Death

    Dying and Death

    Chapter

    For older adults, the phenomenon of death is accepted and does not induce the fear experienced by younger adults. Older adults who do not engage in end-of-life planning may receive unwanted, unnecessary, costly, and painful medical interventions or withdrawal of desired treatment. Many older people feel that the goal of palliative care is to make the best possible dying experience for the older adult and his/her family. In addition to palliative care, an older adult will most likely find himself or herself in an intensive care unit as part of his or her terminal care. Euthanasia, or hastened death, is seen by some as an alternative to palliative care. A psychological aspect of death that an older adult is concerned with, in addition to place of death, is whether he or she will die in his or her sleep or die suddenly, making the death experience an individual phenomenon.

    Source:
    Clinical Gerontological Social Work Practice
  • Summations and Concluding ThoughtsGo to chapter: Summations and Concluding Thoughts

    Summations and Concluding Thoughts

    Chapter

    This concluding chapter summarizes the major points regarding elder abuse (EA) presented in the preceding chapters. It concludes the chapter by taking one last opportunity to encourage exploration and initiation of system-level efforts to solve a major public health problem. The socioecological framework for violence prevention utilized within domestic and global public health work is applicable and extendable to EA. Throughout this book, the authors have argued that EA is a public health problem and that EA may well be among the most under-recognized and under-resourced population health problems of the early 21st century. Public health has frameworks, tools, approaches, relationships, structures, systems, and a variety of agents and organizations poised to address the problem of EA. The imprimatur of the growing population of older adults and the character of demographic transitions occurring globally provide the perfect rationale for action—now.

    Source:
    Elder Abuse and the Public’s Health
  • The Complexities of Caregiving for Minority Older Adults: Rewards and ChallengesGo to chapter: The Complexities of Caregiving for Minority Older Adults: Rewards and Challenges

    The Complexities of Caregiving for Minority Older Adults: Rewards and Challenges

    Chapter

    This chapter focuses on informal caregiving among minority groups. It also focuses on context of caregiving and discuss the various specific challenges caregivers of minority older adults face. The chapter examines some of the specific caregiving interventions tailored for families of color and discuss the implications for practice, policy, and research. Medical advances and greater longevity point to healthier and longer lives for many, but both formal and informal caregiving remain a concern as individuals age and develop conditions that require care. Caregivers are often able to realize the positive aspects of caregiving when they are not struggling with financial or social support challenges. Despite the vast literature on caregiving in general, research pertaining to the needs and experiences of racial/ethnic minority older adults and their caregivers is limited, particularly for American Indians, Pacific Islanders, specific Asian American and Latino subgroups, and religious minorities groups such as Muslim Americans.

    Source:
    Handbook of Minority Aging
  • Social Relationships and Health Among Minority Older AdultsGo to chapter: Social Relationships and Health Among Minority Older Adults

    Social Relationships and Health Among Minority Older Adults

    Chapter

    This chapter discusses current thinking in the field of social support and social relationships, and physical and mental health among older racial and ethnic minorities. Social relationships are an important predictor of health and psychological well-being across the life course. Many minority older adults will face the continued challenges of declining functional status due to physical and mental health conditions over the course of their lives. Most empirical studies on social support among older racial and ethnic minority adults explore the association between social support and both physical and mental health. The wealth of studies on social support among minority older adults has much to offer with respect to understanding the correlates of emotional support and patterns of assistance. The biological mechanisms explaining the link between social support and physical health outcomes have been largely unexplored among older racial and ethnic minority groups.

    Source:
    Handbook of Minority Aging
  • Is Genius Mad?Go to chapter: Is Genius Mad?

    Is Genius Mad?

    Chapter

    The idea of the mad genius persisted all the way to modern times and was even promulgated in scientific circles. Not only was genius mad, but it was associated with criminality and genetic degeneration. The empirical research relevant to the mad-genius issue uses three major methods: the historiometric, the psychometric and the psychiatric. The historical record is replete with putative exemplars of mad genius. The mental illness adopts a more subtle but still pernicious guise-alcoholism. In fact, it sometimes appears that alcoholism is one of the necessities of literary genius. Psychopathology can be found in other forms of genius besides creative genius. Of the available pathologies, depression seems to be the most frequent, along with its correlates of suicide and alcoholism or drug abuse. Family lineages that have higher than average rates of psychopathology will also feature higher than average rates of genius.

    Source:
    Genius 101
  • What is Personality and Why be Interested?Go to chapter: What is Personality and Why be Interested?

    What is Personality and Why be Interested?

    Chapter

    This chapter presents the most salient psychological theories of personality. Personality is a core determinant of individual differences in everyday behaviors. The chapter discusses the difference between what psychologists broadly refer to as normal and what they regard as abnormal or clinical/mental illness. If one looks for an Elvis among personality psychologists, Sigmund Freud would be the one. During the mid-20th century, behaviorism emerged as a dominant paradigm for understanding human behavior, including personality. Although the social cognitive theory of personality has its origins in the radical behaviorist tradition, it emerged in clear opposition to it. According to the lexical hypothesis, historically, the most important and socially relevant behaviors that people display will eventually become encoded into language. Indeed, personality disorders are defined as long-standing, pervasive, and inflexible patterns of behavior and inner experience that deviate from the expectations of a person’s culture.

    Source:
    Personality 101

Pagination

  • Current page 1
  • Page 2
  • Page 3
  • Page 4
  • Page 5
  • Next page ››
  • Last page Last »
Show 10 | 50 | 100 per page
  • Springer Publishing Company

Our content

  • Books
  • Journals
  • Reference

Information for

  • Students
  • Educators
  • Institutions
  • Authors
  • Societies
  • Advertisers

Company info

  • About
  • Help
  • Permissions
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use

© 2022 Springer Publishing Company

Loading