Francine Shapiro Library: EMDR Bibliography
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1. フランシーヌ・シャピロ著 ; 市井雅哉監訳. 市井雅哉 - [ Shapiro, F. (Ed. Translated by Ichii, M.)] (2004). EMDR: 外傷記憶を処理する心理療法 / Īemudīāru: Gaishō kioku o shorisuru shinri ryōhō - [Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing: Basic Principles, Protocols, and Procedures]. 瓶社, Ōsaka: Niheisha.
Language: Japanese
Format: Book
Abstract: "This journal praised the first edition of this book (1996 XVI #4, pp. 99-100) as a major contribution. This new edition is greatly expanded and updated, addressing many of the objections that some researchers have had to EMDR. The result is a step-by-step historical, theoretical, practical introduction to a useful adjunct for the treatment of phobia and post traumatic stress disorder."--Clinical Gerontologist PRAISE FOR THE FIRST EDITION "This pragmatic book is important as the definitive presentation of the EMDR method....Clinicians will welcome its detailed explanation....Several case examples and five annotated transcripts nicely illustrate subtleties in the method and the therapist's client-centered role."--Contemporary Psychology "The writing is clear with general guidelines balanced by exemplary case illustrations to illustrate specific procedures and sample phrases to be used by the therapist....The description of the benefits to be expected is balanced throughout by descriptions of the special precautions, possible side effects, difficult populations encountered and procedural variations needed."--Psychotherapy in Private Practice "In a very few years, EMDR has grown from a bizarre sounding new technique to the most extensively researched treatment for PTSD (with numerous additional applications also being pursued)....A number of recent, rather convincing studies have established EMDR as a legitimate and powerful treatment."--Professional Psychology -- Review
2. フランシーン・シャピロ,マーゴット・シルク・フォ- [Shapiro, F., & Forrest, M. S.(Ed. Translated by Ichii, M.)] (2006). トラウマからの解放 EMDR / Torauma karano kaihō īemudīāru - [EMDR: The breakthrough therapy for overcoming anxiety, stress and trauma]. 瓶社, Ōsaka: Niheisha.
Language: Japanese
Format: Book
Abstract: EMDR, or eye movement desensitization and reprocessing, is a new, nontraditional, very short-term therapy for treating trauma victims that utilizes rhythmical stimulation such as eye movements or hand taps. Shapiro, a clinical psychologist and fellow at the Mental Research Institute in Palo Alto, Calif., who developed the approach, reports cases in which as few as three 90-minute EMDR sessions have relieved patients' disabling anxiety. Explaining how she developed the technique in 1987, Shapiro describes the treatment, theorizes about why it works and cites supporting research. She suggests that the rhythmical stimulation inherent in the process jump starts and accelerates the brain's information processing system to enable the victims to begin to process the traumatic experiences in which they have been stuck so that natural healing can begin. Writer Forrest presents gripping case studies from numerous EMDR-trained therapists to demonstrate the effectiveness of the technique?among others, a Vietnam veteran with post-traumatic stress, a child with night terrors, a rape victim and a mother still nearly paralyzed with grief a year after her son's death. Other studies report success helping drug addicts and the terminally ill.
3. 崎尾英子編 崎尾, 英子- [Sakio, E.] (2003). EMDR症例集 / 崎尾英子編 - lemudiaru shoreishu - [EMDR Case Reports]. 星和書店 Tokyo: Seiwashoten.
Language: Japanese
Format: Book
Abstract: No abstract available.
4. AACAP Official Action. (1998, September). Summary of the practice parameters for the assessment and treatment of children and adolescents with posttraumatic stress disorder. Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, 37(9), 997-1001.
Language: English
Format: Journal
Abstract: This summary provides an overview of the assessment and treatment recommendations contained in the Practice Parameters for the Assessment and Treatment of Children and Adolescents With Posttraumatic Stress Disorder. Major recommendations include the use of clinical interviewing with specific questioning about posttraumatic stress symptoms to diagnose this disorder; recognition of developmental considerations that may impact on how posttraumatic stress disorder symptoms manifest in children; and the use of trauma-focused treatment interventions. Limitations and controversies regarding the present state of knowledge in the area of childhood posttraumatic stress disorder are also discussed.
Keywords: Practice Guidelines PTSD Children Adolescents
5. Adler-Tapia, R. (2006, September). From research to practice: What the research has taught us about training therapists to use EMDR with young children. Paper presented at the annual meeting of the EMDR International Association, Philadelphia, PA.
Language: English
Format: Conference
Abstract: Our initial research study explored the therapist's ability to demonstrate fidelity to the EMDR protocol with young children. While data collection focused on documenting fidelity to the EMDR protocol, ancillary data emerged that identified skills and training that therapists needed in order to successfully implement the full EMDR protocol in the treatment of children. The preliminary content analysis of the data from the research group identified six major themes that impact treating childrcn with the full EMDR protocol that include therapist issues, client issues, treatment issues, parent/home environment issues, clinical environment issues and therapist training issues. This presentation will review the findings from the research with focus on teaching specific skills for therapists to improve their practice of using EMDR with young children. Therapists need to understand the implication of attachment and attunement in the therapeutic relationship, the impact of parents and the home environment on the treatment, and learn skills to teach children emotional literacy in order to improve the efficacy of EMDR in the treatment of young children. This presentation will summarize the advanced skills that therapists working with young children will need after Part 11 training in EMDR. With consultation focused on EMDR and additional training in using EMDR with young children, the research study has demonstrated that therapists trained in child development and play therapy can successfully implement the full eight phases of EMDR with children.
Keywords: Children
6. Aetna, Inc. (2005, June 28). Eye movement desensitization and reprocessing (EMDR) therapy, No. 0583 (Rev). Aetna Clinical Policy Bulletins.
Language: English
Format: Publication
Abstract: Policy Aetna considers eye movement desensitization and reprocessing (EMDR) therapy medically necessary for the treatment of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Aetna considers EMDR experimental and investigational for the prevention of PTSD or for the treatment of other psychiatric and behavioral disorders including anger, guilt, phobias, dissociative disoders, eating disorders, as well as panic and anxiety disorders other than PTSD because its effectiveness for these indications has not been established.
Keywords: Practice Guidelines
7. Alder-Tapia, R., & Settle, C. (2007). In pursuit of evident-based practice: Qualitative findings from a fidelity from a fidelity study of EMDR with children. (Accepted for Review).
Language: English
Format: Other
Abstract: PowerPoint Presentation
Robbie Adler-Tapia is a licensed psychologist who has worked with traumatized children and their families for twenty-three years. She is certified in EMDR, an EMDRIA Approved Consultant, an EMDR Institute Facilitator, an EMDR/HAP (Humanitarian Assistance Program) Trainer and works with the EMDR HAPKIDS Project. With the EMDR HAPKIDS Project, Dr. Adler-Tapia volunteers to assist with coordinating research, consultation, and training for therapists working with children internationally. Dr. Adler-Tapia has worked with the Gulf Coast project providing specialty training to therapists working with children impacted by Katrina and has provided specialty trainings about EMDR with children at the EMDRIA International Conference and at advanced week-end trainings. Dr. Adler-Tapia is co-author of the new book, EMDR and the Art of Psychotherapy With Children and accompanying treatment manual for clinicians. Dr. Adler-Tapia and Carolyn Settle, MSW have conducted a study on the ability of therapists to maintain fidelity to the EMDR protocol with children and have written a meta-analysis on the literature published on EMDR with children. In her private practice, Dr. Adler-Tapia integrates play therapy and art therapy into the EMDR protocol to work with children with attachment disorders and severe trauma. She also provides counseling, consultation and psychological services for children and families referred by Arizona Child Protective Services and to law enforcement professionals.
Keywords: Children Cognitions
8. Algotsson, L. (2004). EMDR – Eye movement desensitization and reprocessing, Ett försök att teoretiskt förklara en integrativ metod - [EMDR - Eye Movement Desensitization AND Reprocessing: An attempt to explain theoretically integrative approach. Umeå Universitet, Institutionen för klinisk vetenskap, Enheten för psykoterapi.
Language: Swedish
Format: Other
Abstract: EMDR – Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing är en behandlingsmetod som främst visat sig vara effektiv vid behandling av posttraumatiskt stressyndrom. Francine Shapiro som upptäckt och utvecklat metoden grundar den på ide´n om hjärnan som ett självreglerande, självorganiserande system och kallar sin förklaringsmodell Adaptive Information Processing model. Syfte med detta arbete är att beskriva dess verksamma faktorer, då den inte fungerar samt försöka anknyta teorier som neuropsykologi, dynamisk systemteori och dialektisk konstruktivism till metoden och dess modell. Resultatet ger vid hand att den dynamiska systemteorin främst förklarar de både snabba och plötsliga förändringar som kan noteras vid användandet av metoden, att senare neuropsykologisk forskning förmår bekräfta metodens användbarhet då det gäller att beskriva och förklara det som neuropsykologiskt sker vid behandlingen samt att terapeutisk förändring ofta inbegriper ett pendlande mellan erfarande och förklarande.
9. Allen, G. J., Cónsole D. A., & Keller, M. W. (1998). EMDR: A closer look. New York: Guilford Press.
Language: English
Format: Video
Abstract: Review "This video gives a visual recipe and view of the theory and process of how to do Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR)....The video's strength may lie in allowing clients to view for themselves how well-respected clinicians and researchers have found EMDR helpful to them as well as to their clients....The video and the manual are highly recommended as complementary components for clinicians who wish to increase their comfort level in successfully introducing EMDR to their clients and peers." --Bulletin of the Menninger Clinic
10. American Psychiatric Association. (2004, November). Practice guidelines for the treatment of patients with acute stress disorder and posttraumatic stress disorder. American Psychiatric Association, Arlington, VA.
Language: English
Format: Publication
Abstract: b) Eye movement desensitization and reprocessing (EMDR) EMDR is a form of psychotherapy that includes an exposure-based therapy (with multiple brief, interrupted exposures to traumatic material), eye movement, and recall and verbalization of traumatic memories of an event or events. It therefore combines multiple theoretical perspectives and techniques, including cognitive behavior therapy. Some point to the use of directed eye movements as a feature markedly distinguishing this form of therapy from other cognitive behavior approaches. Others point to the fact that traumatic material need not be verbalized; instead, patients are directed to think about their traumatic experiences without having to discuss them. Like many of the studies of other cognitive behavior and exposure therapies, most of the well-designed EMDR studies have been small, but several meta-analyses have demonstrated efficacy similar to that of other forms of cognitive and behavior therapy (189–192). Studies also suggest that the eye movements are neither necessary nor sufficient to the outcome (193–195), but these findings remain controversial (196, 197). Although it appears that efficacy may be related to the components of the technique common to other exposure-based cognitive therapies, as in the previously described cognitive behavior therapies, further study is necessary to clearly identify the effective subcomponents of combined techniques. Follow-up studies are also needed to determine whether observed improvements are maintained over time.
Keywords: Treatment Guidelines
11. Ankersmit, E. (1992, May). From worthless to working. EMDR Network Newsletter, 2(1), 3-4.
Language: English
Format: Newsletter
Abstract: Julie, age 40, came to therapy depressed and feeling "stuck." She was married to a verbally, and, at times, physically abusive man, and had recently quit her job. As a child, she had been verbally abused and beaten by an emotionally removed andcritical father. She was intelligent and had basic strength and humor.
12. Ankersmit, E. (1994). An interesting observation. EMDR Network Newsletter, 4(1), 10.
Language: English
Format: Newsletter
Abstract: Toward the end of a powerful session, my client closed her eyes and laid her hands lightly on her lap. Immediately, they began a fluttering, spontaneous movement: left hand, right hand. While this was occurring, my client was mostly silent and was processing some very important material. The cognition she ended up with was that she had a right to be scared and desperate as a child. Not surprisingly, this new way of thinking was very important to her.
13. Appelo, M., et al (2001). EMDR. Houten: Bohn Stafleu van Loghum.
Language: German
Format: Book
Abstract: No abstract available.
14. Arnold, C. (1999, October 23). Letters to the editor - RE: David Lister's 1999 paper. The EMDR Practitioner. Retrieved December 27, 2008, from http://www.emdr-practitioner.net/.
Language: English
Format: Journal
Abstract: "I concur with David Lister's model of utilising EMDR in Medical Practice. My own personal trauma has been around radical surgery when I was 24, which was life saving but nonetheless changed the course of my life. The possibilities for healing are endless if EMDR could be incorporated into complementary care units of hospitals that are becoming popular here in the USA. (Complementary care units are quite unlike British health centres, complementary care units offer yoga, meditation, message, visualization, relaxation techniques, hypnosis and biofeedback to patients suffering from a broad range of medical problems, including those with catastrophic illness. Some include homeopathy and herbal medicine as part of the treatment plan. These units have not been without controversy, and administrators have waged a long and hard battle against the medical establishment.)
Keywords: Letter David Lister's 1998 Paper EMDR In Medical Practice
15. Balbo, M. (2006). EMDR: Uno strumento di dialogo fra le psicoterapie - [EMDR: A tool for dialogue among the psychotherapies ]. Milano: McGraw-Hill, 350 pagine.
Language: Italian
Format: Book
Abstract: Negli ultimi anni, con l’affermarsi dell’EMDR (Eye Movement Desensitization Reprocessing) come approccio terapeutico consolidato, sono stati formati nel mondo più di 80.000 terapeuti di matrice psicoterapeutica diversa, 1600 soltanto in Italia. Un così ampio interesse per questo metodo potrebbe far rilevare che proprio nell’EMDR i terapeuti, seppure di differente formazione, abbiano ricercato e intravisto uno strumento per poter avviare un dialogo, costruttivo e non soltanto oppositivo, iniziando a considerare la patologia attraverso un nuovo e integrante punto di vista.
Il paradigma dell’Elaborazione Adattiva dell’Informazione messo a punto da Francine Shapiro parte dal presupposto che i fenomeni patologici dipendono da esperienze disturbanti del passato che avviano un modello permanente di emozioni, cognizioni, comportamenti e le strutture di identità che ne conseguono. Il paradigma, pertanto, offre una teoria unificante che può essere considerata come substrato per tutti gli orientamenti terapeutici quando si definisce la patologia come informazione immagazzinata in modo disfunzionale e che può essere adeguatamente integrata attraverso un sistema di elaborazione e risoluzione adattiva, attivato attraverso il protocollo EMDR.
Questo è il primo testo che affronti il tema assai vivo e di attualità dell’integrazione fra i diversi orientamenti psicoterapeutici attraverso un metodo eclettico quale l’EMDR. I contributi degli autori - rappresentanti delle principali scuole di pensiero attualmente presenti nel mondo della psicoterapia italiana - tracciano un percorso di lettura che dimostra come i costrutti teorici e il protocollo EMDR siano compatibili ed efficacemente integrabili con i maggiori nuclei teorici, tradizionali e innovativi. E sono proprio l’elaborazione dei vissuti e i nuovi e più adattivi insight dei pazienti che si attivano attraverso l’approccio EMDR a poter consentire ai terapeuti di capirsi e di utilizzare un linguaggio comune.
In recent years, with laffermarsi dellEMDR (Eye Movement Desensitization Reprocessing) as consolidated therapeutic approach have been trained in the world of 80,000 practitioners of different psicoterapeutica array, 1600 only in Italy. A so broad interest for this method could detect that your nellEMDR therapists, albeit different training, have looked up and saw a tool to be able to start a constructive dialogue and not only oppositivo, beginning to consider the disease through a new and an integral point of view.
The Adaptive Information Processing model paradigm made to point by Francine Shapiro part from the assumption that the pathological phenomena depend on disturbing experiences of the past that initiate a permanent model of emotions, knowledge, attitudes and structures of identity that it entails. The paradigm, therefore, provides a unifying theory that can be considered as a substrate for all therapeutic guidelines when you define the pathology as information stored so dysfunctional and can be adequately integrated through a system of processing and adaptive resolution activated through the EMDR protocol.
This is the first text that tackles the issue very live and topical dellintegrazione between the different psychotherapy guidelines through an eclectic method such as EMDR. Contributions by authors - representatives of major schools of thought are currently in the world of Italian psychotherapy - draw a path of reading that shows how the theoretical constructs and EMDR Protocol are compatible and effectively integrate with the more theoretical, traditional and innovative nuclei. And its elaboration of the living and the new and more adaptive insight of patients that trigger through EMDR to allow practitioners understand you and use a common language.
16. Baldé, P. (2001). Met andere ogen bekeken: EMDR, een nieuwe doeltreffende therapie voor het genezen van emotionele problemen - [With different eyes: EMDR, a new effective therapy for the healing of emotional problems]. Rijswijk: Elmar.
Language: Dutch
Format: Book
Abstract: "Ik heb het boek 'Met andere ogen bekeken' met plezier gelezen en ben er van overtuigd dat dit interessante lectuur is voor geïnteresseerden, voor cliënten en voor collega's die meer over EMDR willen te weten komen. De eerstelijns benadering van EMDR is origineel en een goede suggestie om uit te proberen. Ik persoonlijk heb vooral genoten van de praktijkgevallen, die met een pen geschreven zijn zoals die bij echte romans wordt gebruikt: het personage wordt voor je ogen opgebouwd en levend gemaakt. Het gedeelte over de werking van stress en het effect van trauma op de hersenen is mij ook ten zeerste bevallen, omdat deze materie er op een zeer overzichtelijke en duidelijke manier in wordt verwoord. Wars van alle onverstaanbare medische taal, komt de auteur tot de essentie en weet hij die ook over te brengen. Het gedeelte over de verschillende toepassingsgebieden van EMDR is interessant en kan therapeuten motiveren om de methode nader te leren kennen. Verder vind ik in het boek een zekere gedrevenheid terug: Het geeft een persoonlijke integratie van EMDR weer en niet zomaar een vertaling van het boek van Shapiro zelf. Ik kan het boek aanbevelen als zeer nuttig voor therapeut en cliënt."
"I have the book" With different eyes viewed "with pleasure read and am convinced that this interesting reading for those interested, for clients and colleagues more about EMDR want to know. The primary approach of EMDR is an original and good suggestion to try. I personally have especially enjoyed the practical, with a pen as they are written by real novels are used: the character is for your eyes up and live. The part about the effect of stress and the impact of trauma on the brains I am also very much like, because this matter is in a very concise and clear manner is expressed. Wars of all medical incomprehensible language, the author comes to the essence and he knows that across. The part about the various scopes of EMDR therapists is interesting and can motivate the method to further learning. I also think in the book a certain passion back: It gives a personal integration of EMDR weather and not simply a translation of the book Shapiro himself. I can recommend the book as very useful for therapist and client." [Ludwig Cornil]
17. Bardot, E. (2009). L 'EMDR (eye movement desensitization and reprocessing). In A. Deneux, F.-X. Poudat, & T. Servillat (Eds.) Les psychothérapies : approche plurielle (pp. 375-386) Paris: Masson.
Language: French
Format: Book
Abstract: Les pratiques psychothérapiques se sont multipliées au cours des dernières décennies. On dénombre actuellement dans le monde près de 400 types de psychothérapies. Cette diversité peut entretenir un flou croissant autour de ces approches avec un risque d'amalgame ou de repli sur telle ou telle référence exclusive. Afin d'éviter ce risque et d'orienter les étudiants et les thérapeutes, ce livre propose de présenter les principaux courants psychothérapiques : psychanalytique, cognitivo-comportemental, systémique et stratégique. Le lecteur sera sensibilisé pour chacun des courants à leur histoire, aux enjeux théoriques et psychopathologiques, à la spécificité de la clinique, à la question des indications. Des portraits de personnalités marquantes scandent la présentation de chaque courant, apportant un éclairage biographique. L'ambition est de saisir la pluralité des champs mais également leurs complémentarités car au-delà des spécificités théoriques et techniques, on identifie un certain nombre d'invariants et de facteurs communs au processus psychothérapique. Cet ouvrage espère ainsi contribuer à un mouvement de décloisonnement et de partage des richesses et ressorts des grands courants, dans un esprit d'exigence et de respect mutuel. Des thérapeutes d'horizons et de références différents seront ainsi sensibilisés à la diversité de ces courants et pourront mieux poser les indications d'autres approches que la leur.
18. Barlow, D., Shapiro, F., & White, M. (2005). Supervision Panel 2. Panel at the Evolution of Psychotherapy Conference, Anaheim, CA.
Language: English
Format: Conference
Keywords: Panel Theory Practice
19. Beere, D. B. (2000, June). Intellectualized. EMDRIA Newsletter, 5(2), 5.
Language: English
Format: Newsletter
Abstract: When I find that during EMS my client is very intellectualized and/or engaging in reflective and analytical processing, I have altered the EMs in the following ways. My theoretical rationale is that the conscious activity distances the individual from the inner experience.
Keywords: Theory Practice Directing Eye Movement
20. Beere, D. B. (1992, September). More on EMDR. the Behavior Therapist, 15, 179-180.
Language: English
Format: Journal
21. Bender, S. S. (2006, September). Wash your hands: Healthy and practical EMDR practices. Paper presented at the annual meeting of the EMDR International Association, Philadelphia, PA.
Language: English
Format: Conference
Abstract: This workshop will focus on insider tips for healthy and practical EMDR practice issues. An effective strategy for introducing EMDR therapy and how to make it part of your initial patient interview will be described from the nitty-gritty aspect of dealing with sanitizing your equipment whether using your hands or plastic sensors to an assortment of useful forms. Three forms will be distributed and explained: Welcome to My Practice form, Tracking EMDR Session form, and Addendum to the Multimodal form. In addition, a means of "previewing" with your patient the safe place, the VOC and SUD scales and each of the questions in the assessment phase will be discussed. Emphasis will be placed on the importance of each of these steps for de;eloping a sound therapeutic relationship and gleaning more information about the patient. Newcomers to EMDR will have an opportunity to get the answers to basic questions and the hands on materials that will increase their comfort and competence using and integrating EMDR into their practices.
22. Benor, D. J. (2005, November). Self-healing interventions for clinical practice: Brief psychotherapy with WHEE -- the wholistic hybrid of EMDR and EFT. Complementary Therapies in Clinical Practice, 11(4), 270-274.
Language: English
Format: Journal
Abstract: Potent self-healing approaches are now available to help people to deal with their stresses, anxieties, and pains of physical and emotional origins. The author, a wholistic psychiatrist, shares his clinical experiences in helping his clients deal expeditiously and successfully with a variety of physical and psychological symptoms. This article focuses on WHEE, a brief, potent method for releasing psychological and physical pains, negative beliefs, and disbeliefs, and for installing positive feelings and beliefs. To use modern terminology, this method allows you to correct the serious but not fatal error you have made in letting a child program your lifetime computer. WHEE is a method for reprogramming your default programs. [Author Abstract]
Keywords: Brief Psychotherapy Energy Psychotherapy Psychotherapeutic Processes Stressors Survivors PTSD
23. Bergmann, U. (1999). Exploring the mysteries of the EMDR: Clinical applications. Paper presented at the annual meeting of the Trauma Center Annual Conference, Brookline, MA.
Language: English
Format: Conference
Keywords: Theory Practice Clinical Applications
24. Blinka, D. (2007, March 3). Look again at trauma. New Scientist, 2593, 20.
Language: English
Format: Magazine
Abstract: I was disappointed that in discussing post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) Laura Spinney dismissed eye movement desensitisation and reprocessing (EMDR) as if it was just slightly better than snake oil (3 February, p 40). There is an impressive body of robust research showing that this modern therapy for trauma is, in fact, effective. It is endorsed as such by many prestigious institutions worldwide, including the American Psychiatric Association in its practice guidelines for the treatment of PTSD, which gives EMDR the same status as cognitive behavioural therapy as an effective treatment for the symptoms of both acute and chronic PTSD.
25. Blore, D. C. (2001, November). The EMDR Practitioner is back on the rails...... The EMDR Practitioner. Retrieved December 27, 2008, from http://www.emdr-practitioner.net/.
Language: English
Format: Journal
Abstract: I hope that my previous editorial "SORRY IS NOT ENOUGH", which was subtitled "like Railtrack in the LJK,we have a big programme of modernisation going on", wasn't a bad omen! We all know what has happened to Railtrack! I'm pleased to say that The EMDR Practitioner is 'back on track' so to speak - despite having numerous 'delays' and 'cancellations'. The temptation is to continue with analogies ad infiniturn, such as 'we apologise for the late arrival of The EMDR Practitioner - we hope it hasn't spoilt your reading unduly' - but I won't.
26. Blore, D. C. (1997). Reflections on "a day when the whole world seemed to be darkened'. Changes: An International Journal of Psychology and Psychotherapy, 15(2), 89-95.
Language: English
Format: Journal
Abstract: This paper describes the personal experience of EMDR, and experiences using EMDR, after a mining disaster - it is cited in the EMDR Level 1 Training Manual
27. Blue Cross Blue Shield of North Carolina. (2008, August). Evidence based guideline EMDR (eye movement desensitization and reprocessing). Blue Cross Blue Shield of North Carolina.
Language: English
Format: Publication
Abstract: Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR) is a non-drug, non-hypnosis psychotherapy procedure. It is used to treat post traumatic stress syndrome. It involves the patient moving the eyes rapidly back and forth while following the therapist’s hands as they move side to side across the patient’s visual field. During these eye movements, the therapist is guiding the patient to concentrate on a troubling memory or emotion. This rapid eye movement, which occurs naturally during dreaming, is thought to speed the patient’s movement through a healing process.
Keywords: Blue Cross Blue Shield of North Carolina Insurance Practice Guidelines
28. Brodeur, E. (1995). Heaven’s barbeque. EMDR Network Newsletter, 5(1), 2-3.
Language: English
Format: Newsletter
Abstract: The client is a 27-year-old woman known to me from her first psychiatric hospitalization 2 1/2 years ago, during which she was diagnosed with Major Depression with psychotic features. She also had dissociative syrnptoms including well-defined "parts," though she did not experience time loss. She had tried about 20 different psychoactive medications prior to her first EMDR session, and had also received outpatient electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) 18 months earlier. During ECT, she maintained a straight-A average in her course work to obtain a second degree in nursing.
29. Brown, D. E. (1994). Eye movement desensitization, reprocessing can tame power of memories, dreams, researcher says. Psychiatric Times, 35-36.
Language: English
Format: Newsletter
Abstract: The eyes. say the poets, are the windows to the soul. They may also be a catalyst for the brain. According to Francine Shapiro. Ph.D.. senior research fellow at the Mental Research Institute in Palo Alto, Calif., there is an intimate relationship between eye movement and the processing of emotionally charged images and memories. During a recent conference of the Anxiety Disorders Association of America, Shapiro described her discovery and development of a therapeutic technique that uses guided eye movement to accelerate the treatment of a wide range of psychological disorders.
30. Brown, L. S. (2002). Feminist therapy and EMDR: theory meets practice. In F. Shapiro (Ed.), EMDR as an integrative psychotherapy approach: Experts of diverse orientations explore the paradigm prism (1st ed.) (pp. 263-287). Washington: American Psychological Association. vii, 444 pp.
Language: English
Format: Book Section
Abstract: This chapter includes a review of certain core concepts of feminist therapy theory and an exploration of how EMDR can be integrated into feminist practice as a means of operationalizing that theory. Because feminist therapy is inherently technically eclectic, embracing interventions ranging from the psychodynamic to the most radically behavioral, the question to be addressed regarding EMDR as a feminist practice is whether its use in therapy supports feminist models of change. In feminist practice, that question is the boundary condition for inclusion of a strategy: Can its use promote feminist models and outcomes? Not every way of practicing therapy does this, and some strategies, particularly those that emphasize strategic approaches in which therapists intentionally use their power over the client, are per se problematic. However, EMDR seems to fall easily within the parameters of feminist practice and even in the hands of nonfeminist therapists advances the goals of feminist social and personal change that are at the core of feminist therapy models. In arguing that EMDR does support feminist strategies, this chapter explores the way feminist practice conceptualizes the notions of change and goodness of outcome. To some degree, these notions are very similar to those of nonfeminist therapies, and in other respects they are radically different. [Text, p. 266]
Keywords: Feminist Stressors Survivors Adults Psychotherapeutic Processes
31. Bruzzese, D., & Moore, M. (2006, April). Eye movement desensitization and reprocessing. Southwest Regional Behavioral Health Conference, Albuquerque, NM.
Language: English
Format: Conference
Abstract: Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR) is a complex, highly specialized therapy that combines several therapeutic methods— psychodynamic, cognitive, behavioral, etc.—with eye movements or other forms of rhythmical stimulation, such as hand taps or sounds. It involves recalling a stressful past event and “reprogramming” the memory in the light of a positive, self-chosen belief. EMDR has been shown to be effective in the treatment and relief of Post Traumatic Stress Disorder as well as trauma, depression, anxiety, grief, and other types of disorders listed in the DSM IV. Theories as to why EMDR works are still evolving. Learn about the EMDR treatment method, the benefits, drawbacks and research results.
32. Buijssen, H. (2002, January 9). Geloven in toveren? - [Believing in magic?]. PSY: Tijdschrift voor de geestelijke gezondheidszorg, 5(14), 25.
Language: Dutch
Format: Journal
Abstract: Discussion of "EMDR toveren met ogen" by M. Van Rooijen
33. Butler, K. (1994). The enigma of EMDR: Miracle or hype?. The Therapist, 2(3).
Language: English
Format: Journal
Abstract: Katy Butler is impressed by an amazing new technique.
34. Call, E., & Errebo, N. (1997, June). Embracing change: Incorporating EMDR in clinical practice and systems. Paper presented at the annual meeting of the EMDR International Association, San Francisco, CA.
Language: English
Format: Conference
Keywords: Practice
35. Canadian Coordinating Office for Health Technology Assessment (2005). EMDR for treatment of post-traumatic stress disorder. Canadian Coordinating Office for Health Technology Assessment.
Language: English
Format: Other
Keywords: PTSD Practice Guidelines
36. Carruth, B. (2006). Psychological trauma and addiction treatment. Binghamton, NY: Haworth Press.
Language: English
Format: Book
Abstract: Important reading for current and future addictions treatment clinicians--this book synthesizes and integrates the expanding body of knowledge about combined trauma/addiction treatment to specifically address the needs of clinicians in addiction treatment environments Here, in a single source, is an essential overview of trauma treatment for people in addiction treatment settings. Psychological Trauma and Addiction Treatment presents specific methodologies and techniques for clients in inpatient and outpatient addiction/mental health settings. The contributors--leading clinicians and researchers in the field--provide a comprehensive set of scientific treatment approaches addressing a broad spectrum of trauma disorders. Psychological Trauma and Addiction Treatment brings you up-to-date, authoritative coverage of: The dynamics of co-occurring psychological trauma and addiction All of the primary treatment frameworks currently utilized in trauma treatment Treatment frameworks that take gender into account Cognitive therapies in treating these co-occurring disorders The role of psychodynamic psychotherapies in treatment Attachment disorders and their relation to trauma and addiction treatment EMDR as a treatment for traumatized addicts The psychoneurology of trauma and the implications of psychoneurology in addictions and trauma treatment How self-help groups can contribute to and limit recovery for psychologically traumatized clients Forgiveness therapy as an adjunct to trauma treatment Counselor self-care for those who work with this client population Ultimately, this is a book of hope. Every author in this text has a firm belief that people with co-occurring trauma and addiction can recover, can maintain quality relationships, can confront life's challenges as they arise, and can be happy and fulfilled. Psychological Trauma and Addiction Treatment is designed as essential reading for entry-level and experienced addiction counselors, social workers, professional counselors, psychologists, and others working in the trauma treatment field.
37. Chemtob, C. M., Tolin, D. F., van der Kolk, B. A., & Pitman, R. K. (2000). Eye movement desensitization and reprocessing. In E. B. Foa, T. M. Keane, & M. J. Friedman (Eds.), Effective treatments for PTSD: Practice guidelines from the International Society for Traumatic Stress Studies (pp. 139-154, 333-335). New York: Guilford Press.
Language: English
Format: Book Section
Abstract: Eye movement desensitization and reprocessing (EMDR), an emerging therapy for psychological trauma, has been in use for nearly a decade. Although it has stimulated strong interest and enthusiasm, EMDR has also received intense critical scrutiny. This chapter provides an overview of the history and theory of EMDR. Next, the ENDR procedure is summarized, followed by a review of the outcome literature. Dismantling studies of the contribution of eye movements to the efficacy of the EMDR procedure are then reviewed, followed by an overall rating reflecting the current knowledge of EMDR's efficacy, along with recommendations for its use. The chapter concludes with suggestions for further research. [Text, p 139] [Pilots]
Keywords: Practice Guidelines, Literature Review Treatment Effectiveness
38. Children’s Traumatic Stress Clinic. (2007, June). Eye movement desensitization and reprocessing (EMDR). Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children NHS Trust, 2-3 (London, England).
Language: English
Format: Other
Abstract: EMDR is a relatively new therapy established within the last 10 years or so. It is an extremely effective treatment for people – children as well as adults – who have had traumatic experiences. It is also helpful for a variety of emotional and behaviour problems in adults and children. There is a wealth of information on the Internet about current research into EMDR but this information sheet answers the questions most often asked by parents and children.
39. Choi, J. (2002, October 6). Introducation of EMDR. Paper presented at 37th Annual Fall Seminar: EMDR, Insitute of Mental Health, Hanyang University, Seoul, Korea.
Language: English
Format: Conference
40. CIGNA HealthCare (2008, June 15). Cigna Healthcare Coverage Position: Eye movement desensitization and reprocessing. Revised June 15, 2008, .
Language: English
Format: Publication
Abstract: Systematic reviews: Van Etten et al. (1998) conducted a meta-analysis of the literature regarding treatments for PTSD. The purpose of the study was to evaluate the relative efficacy of various treatments for PTSD. A total of 41 studies were included, that yielded sixty-one treatment outcome trials. Eleven studies were included that examined EMDR. The authors report that behavior therapy and EMDR were the most effective psychological therapies for PTSD, with the two being generally equally efficacious. The review noted that behavior therapy was significantly more effective than all treatments, on observer-rated total PTSD symptoms and no differences in comparative treatment efficacy were discernable between behavior therapy and EMDR across the specific symptom domains of PTSD. It was noted that effect sizes for these therapies were large relative to control conditions, indicating good treatment acceptance. It was also noted, however, that “despite its apparent efficacy, what works in EMDR and the mechanism for how it works remains unclear. That is, we know little about the active ingredients in EMDR and the mechanisms by which these ingredients result in decreased PTSD symptoms.” The literature is not conclusive regarding the role of eye-movement in this treatment.
Keywords: Practice Guidelines
41. Cohen, J. A., Mannarino, A. P., & Rogal, S. (2001, January). Treatment practices for childhood posttraumatic stress disorder. Child Abuse and Neglect, 25(1), 123-135.
Language: English
Format: Journal
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: This study surveyed practices in treating childhood PTSD among child psychiatrists and non-M.D. therapists with self-identified interest in treating traumatized children.METHOD: An anonymous survey was mailed to 207 child psychiatrists ("medical") [members of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry] and 460 nonphysician ("non-medical") therapists [members of the International Society for Traumatic Stress Studies] inquiring about current interventions used to treat children with PTSD. RESULTS: 247 responses were received: of 77 medical and 82 nonmedical respondents who currently treat children with PTSD, a wide variety of modalities are used. Most preferred modalities among medical responders were pharmacotherapy, psychodynamic, and cognitive-behavioral therapy. Most preferred modalities among nonmedical respondents were cognitive-behavioral, family, and nondirective play therapy. 95% of medical respondents used pharmacotherapy for this disorder; most preferred medications to treat childhood PTSD were selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors and alpha-adrenergic agonists. Several significant differences between medical and nonmedical practices were identified. CONCLUSIONS: There is little clinical consensus regarding the effectiveness of the many modalities used to treat traumatized children who have PTSD symptoms; empirical research is particularly needed to evaluate the efficacy of pharmacotherapy and EMDR. [Author Abstract]
Keywords: Treatment PTSD Children Drug Therapy Treatment Effectiveness Adolescents Reexperiencing Avoidance Arousal Mental Health Personnel
42. Cohen, S. (2000). Eye movement desensitization and reprocessing (EMDR): The making of a psychotherapy. McGill University (Canada). AAT MQ64135.
Language: English
Format: Dissertation/Thesis
Abstract: Eye Movement Desensitization Reprocessing (ENDR) therapy has burst upon the psychotherapeutic scene as a tirne-limited, cost-contained, and efficacious treatrnent for anxiety, stress, and psychological trauma. Although this therapy has been pronounced as revolutionary by its inventor, Franche Shapiro, it has distinct historicd precedents. The explanatory models of pathogenic memory and dissociation îheory, and the reiiance on mechanical inference for objectivity rnake EMDR therapy famiIiar and salieut. Notions of suggestion and hypnosis, aud the eye-movement component of therapy are presented as discontinuous with clinical and theoreticai practice, in order to fiee them h m the tainting associations of pseudo-science and quackery. By co~ect ingth e curent EMDR movement with the conceptual and practical history of traumatic memory, dissociation, and suggestion, 1 argue that EMDR is not revolutionary. It is a powerful technotogy of the self, nomaking and valourking certain ways of behaving and thinking. Shapiro's implicit assurnptions that psychological suffering is pathological, and that early traumatic events are indelibly encoded, stored and dissociated in the brain are problematized. A briefcornmentary on the mord, politicai, and psychotherapeutic implications of EMDR therapy is provided.
43. Craig, J. (1996, October). Healing emotional trauma. Chatelaine Magazine for Canadian Women, 69(1).
Language: English
Format: Magazine
Abstract: With EMDR, help is in the eye of the beholder Christine Baird (not her real name) never had reason to distrust her husband of 22 years. So when he confessed to an affair, Baird plunged into four months of sleeplessness, anxiety and despair. "I couldn't see the future as holding any hope for me," says Baird, 49. What she didn't know was that she was suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder, a condition associated with sexual assault victims and war veterans. Counseling didn't help, and Baird was referred to Glenis Holmes, a therapist trained in Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR). It's a technique Baird says helped turn her life around.
44. Curran, L. A. (2009, January). EMDR and EMDR related techniques for effective trauma treatment. Wayne State University, School of Social Work, Center for Social Work Practice Policy and Research, Fort Washington, PA.
Language: English
Format: Other
Abstract: Beginning in the 1990s, Francine Shapiro had discovered and began researching a new neurophysiological technique for treating traumatic material. This technique, alternating bilateral stimulation, was quickly subsumed by Shapiro’s psychotherapeutic orientation known as Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR). After many years of rigorous empirical studies demonstrating its uses and effectiveness in trauma treatment, EMDR has become one of only three approved treatments recommended by the veteran’s administration for the treatment of PTSD. Through didactic illustration and explanation; videotaped demonstrations; and experiential exercises, this seminar provides clinicians the basic principles of EMDR and EMDR- related techniques and how each would be incorporated into their personal therapeutic orientation and practice. Goals 1. Participants will gain understanding of neuroscience’s trauma paradigm · Biological nature of trauma · Specific trauma symptoms and their order of appearance · Primary treatment issues in trauma therapy. 2. Participants will gain understanding of trauma’s cognitive and somatic impact and how to effectively treat its sequelae including: · Hyperarousal · Affect dysregulation · Dissociation · Body memories and “flashbacks” 3. Participants will learn the theory of Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR) and EMDR-related techniques for initial resourcing of clients, followed by desensitizing and cognitive reprocessing of traumatic material. Objectives 1. Participants will identify the biological nature of trauma; how trauma is stored in the body and limbic system, creating physical and psychological symptoms. 2. Participants learn to identify the symptoms of trauma- hyperarousal; affect dysregulation; dissociation, body memories and “flashbacks”. 3. Participants will learn the Adaptive Information Processing Model and clinical research associated with EMDR 4. Participants will learn how EMDR and EMDR-related techniques are used as an adjunct to psychotherapy. 5. Participants will identify and demonstrate the eight 8 Phases of EMDR protocol. 6. Participants will describe the differences between eye movement, auditory and tactile stimulation. 7. Describe the process for resourcing a client prior to actual processing traumatic material. 8. Describe the process of employing tactile alternating bilateral stimulation for the processing traumatic memories.
45. Cvetek, R. (2006, January). Predelava disfunkcionalno shranjenih stresnih izkušenj ter metoda desenzitizacije in ponovne predelave z očesnim gibanjem 2006 - [Processing disfunctionally saved stressful experience, and the method of desensitization and reprocessing of eye movements in 2006] . Predstavitev doktorske disertacije na strokovnem srečanju Novosti na področju klinične psihologije v Sloveniji in v Evropi, Ljubljana .
Language: Slovenian
Format: Dissertation/Thesis
Abstract: Predstavitev doktorske disertacije na strokovnem srečanju Novosti na področju klinične psihologije v Sloveniji in v Evropi, Ljubljana.
46. Dateline NBC. (2000, Jul 26). Video. NBC News.
Language: English
Format: Video
Abstract: Not applicable.
47. de Jongh, A. (2005, June). Could EMDR be a promising treatment in the immediate aftermath of a traumatic incident?. Symposium at the annual meeting of the EMDR Europe Association, Brussels, Belgium.
Language: English
Format: Conference
Abstract: "EMDR in action." Part 2
Various studies have shown that the counselling routinely offered to people
in the immediate aftermath of a traumatic incident seldom protects them
from developing post-traumatic stress -and could even delay their recovery.
On the other hand, clinical experience suggests that in many cases with the
proper utilization of EMDR an almost spontaneous integration of perceptions
of sensory input and the cognitive components of the experience takes
place. Although controlled data about types of interventions. the optimal
time to intervene or predictors of response and recovery are still lacking.
within the organization D.O.E.N., providing critical incident stress
management services in the Netherlands, there is broad experience in
utilizing EMDR with clients who exhibit severe early symptoms following
trauma and who need 'first-aid' treatment. EMDR treatment is generally
started when there is no evidence of change or recovery within the course
of 1 or 2 weeks. Since there is a tremendous unmet need. there is an
important challenge to demonstrate in controlled research the advantages
of EMDR for those who suffer from symptoms of acute stress, for example in
emergency departments and/or the immediate aftermath of mass trauma. This presentation will focus on the rationale for early treatment with the use
of EMDR. This approach is illustrated by segments of video taped treatment
sessions of clients with symptoms of acute stress.
Keywords: Symposium Theory Practice
48. de Jongh, A. & ten Broeke, E. (2007). De behandeling met EMDR: Informatie voor cliënten - [Treatment with EMDR (information for clients)]. Psychopraxis, 9(1), 36-38.
Language: Dutch
Format: Journal
Abstract: GGZ Nieuwsbrief Bohn, Stafleu, van Loghum, 2. Bijlage GGZ Voorlichting.
Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing, afgekort tot EMDR, is een therapie voor mensen die last blijven
houden van de gevolgen van een schokkende ervaring, zoals een verkeersongeval of een geweldsmisdrijf. Het is een
relatief nieuwe therapie. Een eerste versie ervan werd in 1989 beschreven door de ontwikkelaarster ervan, de Amerikaanse
psychologe Francine Shapiro. In de jaren daarna werd deze procedure verder uitgewerkt en ontwikkelde
EMDR zich tot een volwaardige en effi ciënte therapeutische methode. In deze bijdrage zullen we deze methode
nader bespreken.
49. de Jongh, A. & ten Broeke, E. (2002). EMDR: Techniek, resultaten, problemen en valkuilen - [EMDR: Technique, results, problems and pitfalls]. In A. van Minnen & M. P. J. M. Verbraak (Eds), Psychologische interventies bij posttraumatische stressstoornis [Psychological interventions for post traumatic stress disorder] (pp. 75-93). Cure & Care Publishers: Nijmegen.
Language: Dutch
Format: Book Section
Abstract: No abstract available.
Keywords: Practice Theory Pitfalls
50. de Jongh, A. & ten Broeke, E. (2005). Eye movement desensitization and reprocessing. In B.P.R. Gersons & M. Olff (Eds.), 'Behandelingsstrategieën bij posttraumatische stressstoornisen', 2e geheel herziene uitgave (pp. 106-118). Bohn, Stafleu van Loghum: Houten.
Language: Dutch
Format: Book Section
Abstract: No abstract available.
51. de Jongh, A. & ten Broeke, E. (2007). Behandeling met EMDR - [Treatment with EMDR]. GGZ Nieuwsbrief Bohn, Stafleu, van Loghum, 2. Bijlage GGZ Voorlichting.
Language: Dutch
Format: Other
52. de Jongh, A. & ten Broeke, E. (2003). Tendentieuze uitspraken over EMDR niet terecht - [Tendentious statements about EMDR not justified]. PSY: Tijdschrift over de geestelijke gezondheidszorg, 7 (2), 26.
Language: Dutch
Format: Journal
53. de Jongh, A., ten Broeke, E. & van der Meer, K. (1997). Die bedeutung der kognitiven faktoren im rahmen des 'eye movement desensitization and reprocessing' (EMDR): Ein fallbeispiel einer klientin mit angst vor erbrechen. In C.T. Eschenröder (Ed.), 'EMDR: Eine neue Methode zur Verarbeitung traumatischer Erinnerungen' (pp. 123-133). DGTV-Verlag: Tübingen.
Language: Dutch
Format: Book Section
Abstract: No abstract available.
54. de Roos, C., & Beer, R. (2003). EMDR bij kinderen en adolescenten: De klinische praktijk - [EMDR in children and adolescents - The clinical practice]. Kind en Adolescent Praktijk, 2, 12-18.
Language: Dutch
Format: Journal
Abstract: Om ontwikkelingsachterstanden en chronische psychopathologie te voorkomen zijn voor kinderen die lijden onder de gevolgen van traumatische ervaringen, effectieve behandelmogelijkheden van groot belang (Chemtob, Nakashima & Carlson, 2002). EMDR – Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing – blijkt hierbij goede diensten te bewijzen. In dit artikel worden de procedure en de diverse aanpassingen beschreven die nodig zijn voor de toepassing van EMDR bij kinderen en adolescenten. Toepassing bij kinderen vraagt om een benadering die is afgestemd op het ontwikkelingsniveau van het kind, hetgeen vooral tot uiting komt in de attitude van de therapeut en technische aanpassingen in het protocol. Gepleit wordt voor meer aandacht in diverse opleidingen voor het kunnen herkennen van posttraumatische stressreacties en adequate doorverwijzing voor behandeling.
Keywords: Children Adolescents
55. DeGraffenried, D. F. (2005, September). Developing EMDR practice in community mental health & agency settings: Working with clinical or administrative reluctantance. Paper presented at the annual meeting of the EMDR International Association, Seattle, WA.
Language: English
Format: Conference
Abstract: EMDR has not achieved full acceptance as a practice model within community mental health and agency settings. Some agencies are reluctant to develop an EMDR practice due to administrative concerns, clinical apprehensions or implementation reluctance. This resistance has constrained the development of EMDR in communities of color, those that are impoverished and often in settings where post traumatic stress is the focus of treatment. This workshop will identify the three common areas or agency reluctance concerning EMDR and will demonstrate the use af a simple assessment tool designed to identify where thc intervention is needed to accomplish change and support EMDR integration into the agency.
Keywords: Community Mental Health Agencies Client or Administrative Reluctance
56. DeGraffenried, D. F. (2007, September). Implementing EMDR practice in community mental health & agency settings: Working with clinical or administrative reluctance. Paper presented at the annual meeting of the EMDR International Association, Dallas, TX.
Language: English
Format: Conference
Abstract: EMDR has not achieved full acceptance as a practice model within community mental health and agency settings. Some agencies are reluctant to develop an EMDR practice due to administrative concerns, clinical apprehensions or implementation reluctance. This resistance has constrained the development of EMDR in communities with the greatest need and often in settings where post traumatic stress is the focus of treatment. This workshop will identify the three common areas of agency reluctance concerning EMDR and, via a PowerPoint presentation, will demonstrate the use of a simple assessment tool designed to identify where the intervention is needed to accomplish change and support EMDR integration into the agency.
Keywords: Community Mental Health Agencies Client or Administrative Reluctance
57. Dekker, A. (2001, June). Eye to eye? Bilateral stimulation in cross-cultural context. Paper presented at the annual meeting of the EMDR International Association, Austin, TX.
Language: English
Format: Conference
Abstract: Participants will be able to: 1) identify cross-cultural healing practices that incoporate bilateral stimilation; 2) describe relevant research studies; and 3) identiy guildeines for the development of culturally sensitive applications of EMDR.
Keywords: Bilateral Stimulation BLS Cultural Healing Practices
58. Denicola, J. A. (1993, September). Quick fixes for complex problems?. the Behavior Therapist, 16(8), 218.
Language: English
Format: Journal
Abstract: I have followed with interest the ongoing debate in the Behuvior Therapist regarding the practice and dissemination of the eye movement desensitization and reprocessing (EMDR) technique. I am most struck, however, by the willingness of behavior therapists to enthusiastically embrace and practice this technique despite "the paucity of data with regard to its effectiveness" (Boudewyns, Stwertka, Hver, Albrecht, & Sperr, 1993).
59. Dexter, B.A. (2007, March). An angel. EMDRIA Newsletter, 12(1), 11.
Language: English
Format: Newsletter
Abstract: “Just wanted to share something with you all. It is more than rewarding to see the wonderful things people do for each other here. I wrote this short story the other day, as a way to honor these young people who have sacrifi ced all. These are your incredibly brave young men and women, out doing patrols and convoys at extreme risk of death. It is also amazing to see the wonderful work the medical staff does here. I am so very thankful that we can provide this kind of medical care for our troops. Surely God works through their hands!”
60. Di Nuovo, S. (2001, Augusto). Una messa a punto sull'EMDR - [Development of EMDR]. Psicoterapia Cognitiva e Comportamentale, 7(2), 149.
Language: Italian
Format: Journal
Abstract: No abstract available.
Keywords: Theory Practice History
61. Dillon, D. (1997). The enigma of EMDR. Christian Counseling Today, 5(1), 40-43.
Language: English
Format: Journal
Abstract: Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR) took me by surprise in the fall of 1994, when a person we'll call Ann told me how she had recovered from Post- Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) symptoms in one two-hour session. While in a foreign country, she had seen several violent acts that she could not forget. For two years after returning to the States, Arm had tried to escape the flashbacks and frightening dream.
62. Doner, K. (1994, September). EMDR: Miracle cure or sleight of hand? . . . Eye movement desensitization and reprocessing. American Health, 13(7), 78-79.
Language: English
Format: Magazine
Abstract: Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR): Miracle Cure or Sleight of Hand? Even practitioners admit that it's pretty strange but this new therapy that manipulates eye movements is helping people who suffer from severe traumatic experiences. The EMDR method accelerates pathologies and self esteem issues related to both upsetting past events and present life conditions.
63. Donovan, F. (1999). Looking through the hemispheres. EMDR Humanitarian Assistance Programs.
Language: English
Format: Video
Abstract: Not applicable.
64. Dorsey, D. E. (2003). An overview of EMDR: A handbook for clinicians considering EMDR training. California State University, Northridge. --.
Language: English
Format: Dissertation/Thesis
Abstract: Thesis--(M.S.)
65. Drexler, B. M. (1995). Eye movement desensitization and reprocessing: An exploration of use by licensed clinical social workers. California State University, Long Beach, CA. AAT 1377511.
Language: English
Format: Dissertation/Thesis
Keywords: Theory Practice Use by Social Worker
66. Dumery, J. (2005). Eeen ogenblik EMDR - [EMDR and time]. Het Perron, Brugge, Belgium.
Language: Dutch
Format: Conference
Abstract: A T-shirt with the text shows how cynical fear. We have to attack, for trauma, and how we try to deal with. Cynicism is an unpleasant way to tell the truth, perhaps Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR) is a more appropriate response to the treatment of psychological trauma
67. Dutton, P. (2004). Will someone tell me the truth about EMDR?. Paper presented at the British Psychological Society Scottish Branch Annual Conference, Pitlochry, Scotland.
Language: English
Format: Conference
68. Edelmann, R. J. (2002, May). Letters: Roll up, roll up for the great EMDR debate. The Psychologist, 15(5), 222.
Language: English
Format: Journal
Abstract: WHILE appreciating that The Psychologist is not a standard academic journal, I was nevertheless somewhat surprised and not a little disappointed to see space being given to an uncritical ‘sales pitch’ for EMDR in the March issue. While Shapiro acknowledges that the treatment she originated has been the subject of ‘much scrutiny and debate’, reference is then only made to one aspect of this debate; that is, the identification of EMDR’s active ingredient. By failing to provide at least a handful of references to major areas of contention in relation to EMDR, the article does a disservice to interested practitioners and academics. Papers by Herbert et al. (2000) and Rosen et al. (1998) would allow readers to at least start to make a more balanced appraisal of EMDR.
Keywords: Theory Practice Letter
69. Edmond, T. (2005, September). The future of evidence in EMDR. Plenary presented at the annual meeting of the EMDR International Association, Seattle, WA.
Language: English
Format: Conference
Abstract: Evidence based practice has gained increased attention in recent years, having been advanced initially by the medical professions, encouraged by various academic institutions, increasingly required by insurance companies, and endorsed by many professional associations. Although this represents an important movement towards improving the quality of care available to clients, there are legitimate concerns about what constitutes evidence. In the past 15 years, research on EMDR has proliferated and the methodological rigor of that work has greatly improved. Yet skepticism ahout the effectiveness of EMDR remains and much is still unknown about the parameters of this innovative approach to psychotherapy. This presentation will provide a description of evidence based practice as a backdrop for examining the current state of EMDR research with recommendations for areas of research that are needed, methodological issues that should be considered, and the role of practitioners in the generation of that knowledge. Findings from a mix-methods study evaluating the effectiveness of EMDR with adult female survivors of childhood sexual abuse will be used as an example to critique the limitations of the gold standard approach to generating evidence based practice and to illustrate the importance of methodological diversity in the pursuit of knowledge about the practice of psychotherapy.
Keywords: Plenary Evidence-Based Practice Gold Standard
70. Elling, M. (2004, December). Eye Momement desensitization & reprocessing (EMDR). Utrecht: NIZW. Gedownload op 10/09/2008 van.
Language: Dutch
Format: Journal
Abstract: Verwerking van herinneringen aan identificeerbare traumatische ervaringen. Hierdoor kunnen klachten, die zijn ontstaan als gevolg van die herinneringen en het lijden dat daarmee gepaard gaat, worden verminderd.
71. Eschenröder, C. T. (1997). EMDR. Eine neue methode zur verarbeitung traumatischer erinnerungen. Dgvt-Verlag .
Language: German
Format: Book
Abstract: Die von Francine Shapiro entwickelte innovative EMDR-Methode (Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing/Augenbewegungs-Desensibilisierung und Neubearbeitung) hat in der Fachwelt großes Aufsehen erregt, so sehr grenzte sie an Zauberei. Ursprünglich für die Behandlung von Trauma-Opfern gedacht, erschließen sich mittlerweile weitere Anwendungsbereiche. Was ist davon zu halten? Dieser Frage wird im vorliegenden Band beantwortet, der über den aktuellen Stand des Wissens zur EMDR informiert und zahlreiche Anwendungsbeispiele aus unterschiedlichen Bereichen und psychotherapeutischen Schulen vorstellt. Es zeigt sich, daß EMDR vor allem bei der Verarbeitung vergangener belastender Erlebnisse in manchen Fällen in erstaunlich kurzer Zeit zu einem Abklingen negativer Emotionen sowie zu neuen Einsichten und spontanen Veränderungen von Vorstellungsbildern führt.
72. Evans, R. (2000, September). Speak to the wind. EMDRIA Newsletter, 5(4), 10.
Language: English
Format: Newsletter
Abstract: Seven years after a tree suddenly fell across their car in a rainstorm, severely injuring her husband, but sparing her, a woman of 58 was referred to me with a curious, persistent post traumatic symptom. In most regards she had recovered well from the accident which left her husband seriously brain damaged and wheelchair bound in a nursing home where she visited him frequently. She worked regularly in the business department of a theatre company, had a strong social network and had, in several years of traditional therapy, been able to move beyond her rage and sorrow concerning the event. She was, however, “terrified of the wind” and this fear, while not having major impact upon her daily activities, often led to night time awakenings when the wind “howled” outside her window, and limited her outdoor activity whenever there was moderate wind. She was determined to “overcome” this last residue of the accident and was told by a client who had worked with me that EMDR could be of help.
73. Fenstermaker, D. (1991, December). A general practice screen for dissociative disorders. EMDR Network Newsletter, 1(2), 13-17.
Language: English
Format: Newsletter
Abstract: Media descriptions, popular magazine articles, novels and television programs, dissociaparticularly talk shows, present a variety of human conditions to the public. These accounts are often portrayed to represent the general condition when, in fact, they represent highly stylized, idiosyncratic variations of a general class. Over the last ten years, many accounts of dissociative somedisorders, most specifically multiple personality disorder (MPD), have been presented in the media in exactly that sensationalizing fashion. The public, as well as many mental health practioners, have been inundated with largely believable, but exceptionally rare, accounts of how patients with these disorders function, (e.g., what they are like in their day to day living and how they are likely to present themselves in treatment). These conditioned descriptions lead inadvertently to unrealistic expectations about how to recognizesignsand symptoms that would lead to an accurate diagnosis of dissociative disorders.
Keywords: Dissociative Disorders
74. Fernandez, I. (2001, Aprile). Forum su: Eye movement desensitization and reprocessing (EMDR). Psicoterapia Cognitiva e Comportamentale, 7(1), 35.
Language: English
Format: Journal
Abstract: L'articolo di J. Wolpe e J. Abrams presenta un caso trattato nel 1991 con Eye Movement Desensitization (EMD), erano le prime applicazioni cliniche dopo la scoperta di F. Shapiro nel 1989 dell'azione dei movimenti oculari sullo stress traumatico e sulle situazioni ansiogene. Negli anni successivi l'EMD è diventato EMDR, infatti, la desensibilizzazione è il primo effetto che avviene durante una seduta dove viene applicata la stimolazione bilaterale, ma successivamente l'osservazione massiccia ed approfondita degli effetti clinici di questo metodo terapeutico ha rivelato che il processo che avviene è molto più complesso. È stato notato che simultaneamente alla desensibilizzazione avviene una ristrutturazione cognitiva e che entrambe sono il risultato dell'elaborazione dell'informazione legata ai ricordi traumatici. Nel lavoro realizzato con la paziente Shirley, Wolpe descrive tutta la storia di terapie a cui era stata sottoposta fino a quel momento che però non erano riuscite ad affrontare e risolvere l'esperienza traumatica della violenza sessuale. L'EMDR è stato efficace perché ha lavorato sul piano neurofisiologico, dove l'informazione è immagazzinata in modo disfunzionale ed è accessibile soltanto a questo livello, infatti, le terapie prettamente verbali non sempre riescono ad accedere e ad agire su questo piano e di conseguenza non riescono a modificare gli aspetti clinici legati alle esperienze di stress traumatico. Il programma terapeutico di Wolpe per l'introduzione dell'EMDR si è focalizzato inizialmente sull'esperienza traumatica della violenza (2 sedute) e dopo aver elaborato l'esperienza in sé sono stati individuati altri bisogni terapeutici legati all'ansia sociale e agli spunti agorafobici. Le 5 sedute successive sono state utilizzate per la desensibilizzazione di una serie di situazioni a cui era stato attribuito dalla paziente un valore della scala SUD. Si è iniziato dalla situazione più ansiogena (85) nella scala SUD e anziché utilizzare il rilassamento proprio della desensibilizzazione sistematica, sono stati realizzati movimenti oculari. La paziente riportava una riduzione dell'ansia dopo ogni set di stimolazione bilaterale e l'immagine della situazione temuta tendeva a sparire e in alcune situazioni addirittura diventava positiva. La ristrutturazione cognitiva è avvenuta nella paziente in modo spontaneo man mano che la terapia procedeva, fino a riportare che poteva camminare per strada sentendosi una cittadina normale, avendo un progetto per il futuro, inoltre aveva smesso quasi completamente di bere e si sentiva che un peso si era sollevato dalle sue spalle. Riportava di essere più rilassata sul lavoro, si godeva le passeggiate solitarie sulla spiaggia, aveva cominciato a curare il suo aspetto fisico e aveva iniziato ad avere interesse per gli uomini e ad avvicinarsi a qualcuno, ha riportato che non temeva più di essere violentata e non aveva più i pensieri suicidi e gli autori hanno ritenuto la terapia conclusa. I risultati si sono mantenuti ai vari follow up realizzati nel tempo. Quindi possiamo vedere i risultati della terapia con EMDR a livello cognitivo, nelle attribuzioni che fa del mondo e di se stessa, differenziando i pericoli veri da quelli meramente ansiogeni, soggettivo per quello che la paziente riporta emotivamente e a livello comportamentale, dove ha messo in atto dei nuovi comportamenti adattivi in modo spontaneo. Nella parte conclusiva gli autori menzionano una serie di 100 casi che sarebbero stati pubblicati nel Journal of Behaviour Therapy and Experimental Psychiatry e si augurano che altre pubblicazioni potessero rispondere al bisogno di delucidare i meccanismi che permettono questi cambiamenti dopo una seduta di EMDR. Come si evince dagli articoli che vengono pubblicati in questo numero la ricerca, il lavoro empirico e le osservazioni cliniche hanno dato un grande contributo in questo senso negli ultimi anni. Sull'EMDR sono stati pubblicati più di 150 articoli che ne dimostrano la efficacia. Tra le riviste scientifiche più accreditate dove sono pubblicati dei lavori di ricerca sull'EMDR troviamo: Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, British Journal of Clinical Psychology, Journal of Anxiety Disorders, Journal of Behaviour and experimental psychiatry, Behavioural and Cognitive psychotherapy, Behaviour Therapy, Journal of traumatic stress, The Clinical Psychologist, Journal of Psychotherapy integration, Harvard Mental Health letter, Journal of Clinical psychology, Psychotherapy, British Journal of Psychiatry, International Journal of Psychiatry. Inoltre, sono stati pubblicati libri e manuali per terapeuti tradotti in varie lingue (in Italia dall'Astrolabio e dalla Mc Graw Hill Italia). Inoltre, recentemente, l'International Society for Traumatic Stress Studies (ISTSS) ha stabilito e comunicato che l'EMDR è uno dei metodi terapeutici più rapidi ed efficaci per superare e risolvere il disturbo post-traumatico da stress.
75. Fernandez, I. (Date of Publication Unknown). Eye movement desensitization and reprocessing. Unknown..
Language: Italian
Format: Other
Abstract: EMDR è un acronimo per Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (Desensibilizzazione e Rielaborazione attraverso i Movimenti Oculari). E' un metodo clinico innovativo che ha aiutato con successo ormai più di un milione di individui reduci da eventi traumatici (abuso sessuale, violenza in famiglia, guerra, crimini) ma anche soggetti con altri disturbi psicologici (depressione, dipendenze, fobie e aspetti legati all'auto stima).
76. Figley, C. R., Leeds, A. M., Tinker-Wilson, S. A., van der Kolk, B. A., Foa, E. B., Davidson, J. R. T., & Frances, A. J. (2000, October). Further discussion of EMDR for treatment of PTSD. Journal of Clinical Psychiatry, 61(10), 785-786.
Language: English
Format: Journal
Abstract: No abstract available.
Keywords: Professional Criticism Professional Criticism Reply PTSD Treatment Effectiveness Letter Practice Guideline
77. Foa, E. B., Davidson, J. R. T., & Frances, A. J. (1999). Treatment of posttraumatic stress disorder. Journal of Clinical Psychiatry, 60 (Supplement 10).
Language: English
Format: Journal
Abstract: Expert consensus guideline series. No abstract available.
Keywords: PTSD Professional Criticism Professional Criticism Reply Professional Standards Letter Practice Guideline
78. Foa, E. B., Keane, T. M., Friedman, M. J., & Cohen, J. A. (2009). Effective treatments for PTSD: Practice guidelines from the International Society for Traumatic Stress Studies, (2nd ed.). New York, NY: Guilford.
Language: English
Format: Book
Abstract: In the Practice Guidelines of the International Society for Traumatic Stress Studies, EMDR was listed as an efficacious treatment for PTSD: Part IV Treatement Guidelines, No. 8 Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing.
Keywords: Treatment Guidelines
79. Foa, E., Davidson, J., & Frances, A. (2000, October). Treatment of posttraumatic stress disorder. Journal of Clinical Psychiatry, 61(10), 784-785.
Language: English
Format: Journal
Abstract: Based on surveys of 52 experts on the psychotherapy treatment and 57 experts on the medication treatment of PTSD, these guidelines can be viewed as an expert consultation, to be weighed in conjunction with other information and in the context of each individual patient-physician relationship. [Adapted from Text, pp. 7-8]. Commentary: The expert consensus guideline series
Keywords: Practice Guidelines PTSD Treatment
80. Follette, W. C., & Beitz, K. (2003, July). Adding a more rigorous scientific agenda to the empirically supported treatment movement. Behavior Modification, 27(3), 369-386.
Language: English
Format: Journal
Abstract: As the empirically supported treatment (EST) effort has expanded, there are efforts to make the study of ESTs a more integral part of training programs. In its present form, the EST list provides a poor model of how to evaluate treatment and scientific issues related to our field. This article offers several suggestions regarding how to establish a more relevant scientific agenda for the committee’swork if the study of ESTs is to usefully influence training programs. Recommendations are made to encourage programs and the CSP to study mechanisms of change, important contextual variables for therapy delivery, the distinction between statistical significance and clinical meaningfulness, dissemination, cost-effectiveness, and iatrogenic effects. It is argued that any program that created a curriculum educating students to thoughtfully address these issues when evaluating therapies would be producing sound clinical scientists regardless of the quality of the EST list itself.
Keywords: Empirically supported treatments EST Critique Training Committee on Science and Practice CSP
81. Forbes, D., Creamer, M. C., Phelps, A. J., Couineau, A. L., Cooper, J. A., Bryant, R. A., McFarlane, A. C., Devilly, G. J., Matthews, L. R., & Raphael, B. (2007, July). Treating adults with acute stress disorder and post-traumatic stress disorder in general practice: A clinical update. Medical Journal of Australia, 187(2), 120-123.
Language: English
Format: Journal
Abstract: General practitioners have an important role to play in helping patients after exposure to severe psychological trauma. In the immediate aftermath of trauma, GPs should offer "psychological first aid", which includes monitoring of the patient's mental state, providing general emotional support and information, and encouraging the active use of social support networks, and self-care strategies. Drug treatments should be avoided as a preventive intervention after traumatic exposure; they may be used cautiously in cases of extreme distress that persists. Adults with acute stress disorder (ASD) and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) should be provided with trauma-focused cognitive behaviour therapy (CBT). Eye movement desensitisation and reprocessing (EMDR) in addition to in-vivo exposure (confronting avoided situations, people or places in a graded and systematic manner) may also be provided for PTSD. Drug treatments should not normally replace trauma-focused psychological therapy as a first-line treatment for adults with PTSD. If medication is considered for treating PTSD in adults, selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor antidepressants are the first choice. Other new generation antidepressants and older tricyclic antidepressants should be considered as second-line pharmacological options. Monoamine oxidase inhibitors may be considered by mental health specialists for use in people with treatment-resistant symptoms.
Keywords: Acute Stress Disorder PSTD Anti-depressants SSRIs MAO Inhibitors
82. Foster, S. (2000, September). Unique EMDR applications for building your private practice: Escaping managed care. Paper presented at the annual meeting of the EMDR International Association, Toronto, Ontario Canada.
Language: English
Format: Conference
Abstract: Participants will: 1) learn about unique applications of EMDR already in use: 2) be able to identify their practice interests, existing skills and resources; and areas of growth necessary to implement a new practice specialty; and 3) learn systematic ways in which community-based speaking and teaching activities can general referrals.
Keywords: Practice Specialty
83. Foster, S., Lendl, J., & Wilson, D. (1992). EMDR. Paper presented at the California Psychological Association Annual Conference.
Language: English
Format: Conference
84. Fraser, G. A. (2005, May). Lighter moments in therapy. Paper presented at the EMDR Canada Annual Conference, Ottawa, Ontario Canada.
Language: English
Format: Conference
85. Freeman, C., & Power, M. J. (2007). Handbook of evidenced-based psychotherapies: A guide to research and practice. Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley & Sons.
Language: English
Format: Book
Abstract: At a time when evidence is everything, the comprehensive Handbook of Evidence-Based Psychotherapies handbook provides a unique, up-to-date overview of the current evidence-base for psychological therapies and major psychological disorders. The editors take a pluralistic approach, covering cognitive and behavioural therapies as well as counselling and humanistic approaches. Internationally-renowned expert contributors guide readers through the latest research, taking a critical overview of each practice’s strengths and weaknesses. A final chapter provides an overview for the future.
Keywords: Evidence-Based Psychotherapy
86. Gardner, J. R. (2004, June). Cognitive behavior technique: Eye movement desensitization and reprocessing, 1st edition. Unknown.
Language: English
Format: Other
Abstract: Eye movement desensitization and reprocessing is a controversial technique reported to relieve traumatic memories, phobias, and a wide variety of psychological problems. This paper explains the EMDR procedure, and discusses research that supports and refutes its efficacy.
87. Gold, S. N. (2002, Jan). The future of trauma practice: Visions & aspirations. Journal of Trauma Practice, 1(1), 1-15.
Language: English
Format: Journal
Abstract: In the new and evolving field of traumatology, the need to keep practitioners apprised of emerging developments is acute. While many journals about trauma exist, most of them focus primarily on publication of empirical research studies. Applied professionals rarely read these journals because they see empirical investigations as having very little relevance to their daily practice. Regrettably, these circumstances foster divisiveness between traumatologists who identify themselves mainly as researchers and those who consider themselves chiefly practitioners. Providing an avenue for bridging and integrating the sub-cultures of trauma research and practice is one of the primary aims of the Journal of Trauma Practice (JTP). JTP also seeks to unite the diverse professions that routinely work with traumatized populations, such as emergency room personnel and other medical practitioners, attorneys and forensic specialists, law enforcement personnel, and emergency service workers. Accomplishing these objectives will require openness to innovation while maintaining high standards of scholarship.
Keywords: Trauma Posttraumatic Stress Disorder PTSD Trauma Practice Trauma Research Traumatology Traumatic Memory Critical Incident Stress Debriefing CISD
88. Gold, S., & Faust, J. (2001). The future of trauma practice: Visions and aspirations. Journal of Trauma Practice, 1(1), 1-15.
Language: English
Format: Journal
Abstract: In the new and evolving field of traumatology, the need to keep practitioners apprised of emerging developments is acute. While many journals about trauma exist, most of them focus primarily on publication of empirical research studies. Applied professionals rarely read these journals because they see empirical investigations as having very little relevance to their daily practice. Regrettably, these circumstances foster divisiveness between traumatologists who identify themselves mainly as researchers and those who consider themselves chiefly practitioners. Providing an avenue for bridging and integrating the sub-cultures of trauma research and practice is one of the primary aims of the Journal of Trauma Practice (JTP). JTP also seeks to unite the diverse professions that routinely work with traumatized populations, such as emergency room personnel and other medical practitioners, attorneys and forensic specialists, law enforcement personnel, and emergency service workers. Accomplishing these objectives will require openness to innovation while maintaining high standards of scholarship. [Author Abstract]
Keywords: Editorial PTSD Scientific Research Treatment
89. Gomory, T. (2001, January ). A fallibilistic response to Thyer’s theory of theory-free empirical research in social work practice. Journal of Social Work Education, 37(1), 26-50.
Language: English
Format: Journal
Abstract: Abstract: The author responses to the professor B.A. Thyer's theory of theory-free empirical research in social work practice. Thyer provides a number of examples in the present article, several apparently by his doctoral students. It is not quite clear what he means when he offers them in the spirit of these contemporary qualitative times as anecdotal examples of this distortion of the research process, except to suggest that these case examples are just personal reflections and are not therefore to be taken seriously. That would be most unempirical and to no point. It seems at least to this reviewer that a set of theoretical conjectures formalized in a treatment package was being tested, perhaps something to the effect that the provision of education about the consequence of compliance or noncompliance together with case management support and reminders will significantly improve maternal compliance. Thyer apparently doesn't recognize this as theory testing or using theory, but he would need to spell out specifically why, for example, case management is a theory-free intervention.[Author's abstract]
Keywords: Theory-Free Empirical Research Thyer
90. Goodyear-Brown, P. (2008, January). Empirically informed play therapy inteventions for treating traumatized children, Parts I & II. Paper presented at the San Diego International Conference on Child and Family Maltreatment, San Diego, CA.
Language: English
Format: Conference
Abstract: Evidence Based Practice is the new standard in the field. However, the evidence base regarding trauma treatments for children, particularly young children, is in the early stages of it's evolution. Recent research related to the neurobiology of trauma, implicit and explicit memory systems and the impact of these dynamics on trauma treatment will be discussed. Treatments with a large evidence base, such as TF-CBT and EMDR will be discussed with a view to how many of the treatment goals can be accomplished and more easily digested by children through the vehicle of play. It is critical that practitioners who serve traumatized children be able to match interventions to treatment goals and symptomatology. Specific play therapy interventions will be tied to treatment goals in an effort to help practitioners expand their repertoires with child-friendly interventions based on the latest research. The treatment areas covered in this workshop will include helping the client to 1) re-establish a sense of safety and security, 2) learn and practice stress inoculation strategies, 3) identify and confront faulty attributions related to the trauma, 4) restructure distorted cognitions related to the trauma and 5) create a trauma narrative. Several play therapy interventions will be explained and demonstrated for each of the aforementioned gaols. Children accomplish the hard work of healing from trauma in a gentle, fun and safe treatment milieu. Case vignettes, slides and video clips will augment the didactic presentation. Experiential methods will also be used. Participants should come prepared to play!
Keywords: Play Therapy Evidence-Based Practice Children
91. Grainger, R. D. (1992, May). Dealing with feelings: Eye movements: A new psychotherapeutic tool . American Journal of Nursing, 92(5), 18.
Language: English
Format: Journal
Abstract: The "Dealing with Peelings" series has focused on innovative methods and strategies for nurses and others to use to better manage their feelings. This month's installment continues in that direction, but with a variation. This divergence from the usual format is because of the significance of a recent discovery which may potentially alleviate much of the human pain we encounter every day as nurses.
92. Grand, D. (1997, July). Advanced clinical seminar: Practice innovations in auditory stimulation, body processing, dynamic interweave, and EMDR based diagnosis. Paper presented at the annual meeting of the EMDR International Association, San Francisco, CA.
Language: English
Format: Conference
Abstract: Advanced clinical seminar
Keywords: Auditory Stimulation Body Processing Dynamic Interweave
93. Grand, D. (2001, May). Flow EMDR - Advanced clinical practice. Paper presented at the EMDR Europe Association annual meeting, London, UK.
Language: English
Format: Conference
Abstract: Although the structured protocols and procedures of EMDR practice have provided therapists with enhanced healing opportunities, the awkwardness of the procedure remains unnatural to many EMDR therapists. However, EMDR can be modified to a more natural face-to-face flowing treatment process. This presentation will comprehensively examine flow EMDR and its dual naturalising components of "essential listening" and extended bi-lateral stimulation. "Essential listening" entails the therapists accepting that all potential answers reside in the clients system. This information and the ensuing healing process is supported by the therapist suspending all meta communications emanating from the client. Following this procedure, combined with the targeted information of the protocol activated by bi-lateral stimulation, allows the client to process information until they anive at their "essential truths". Flow EMDR also utilises longer sets and lor continuous bi-lateral stimulation afforded by auditory and tactile stimulation. Innovations in eye movement, called ''paint brushing", will also be demonstrated with varied pace, direction, pausing and distance. Auditory stimulation will be reviewed as to its current modes and tactile stimulation will also be explored in terms of tapping, pressing and mechanical activation. Flow EMDR also actively integrates ego state work, part protocols, multiple protocols, parallel protocols, self questioning interweaves, targeting of present mood states, resource activation's of locating and installing positive body sensations and body processing enhanced by colour &d image associations. This presentation will include lecture, clinical demonstratipn, audience participatiowkind extensive hand-out material.
Keywords: Flow EMDR Essential Listening
94. Grand, D. (1999). Psychodynamic theory and practice - EMDR und psychodynamische theorie und praxis. Institut fur Traumatherapie [3 pages].
Language: German
Format: Other
Keywords: Psychodynamic Theory Practice
95. Grant, M. (2002). A multi-modal approach based on EMDR. OvercomingPain.com.
Language: English
Format: Other
Abstract: Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR) is a powerful new method of psychotherapy. To date, EMDR has helped over one million people of all ages recover from many different types of psychological distress.
96. Grant, S. (1999). EMDR: Examining the evidence, implementing the practice. Clinical Psychology Forum, 133, 13-16.
Language: English
Format: Journal
Abstract: No abstract available.
Keywords: Research
97. Greenwald, R. (2006, September). A trauma-informed treatment model for practice and consultation. Paper presented at the annual meeting of the EMDR International Association, Philadelphia, PA.
Language: English
Format: Conference
Abstract: EMDR is both a trauma resolution method and a comprehensive phase model of trauma treatment. EMDR training has typically focused primarily on the trauma resolution method (phases 3-7 of the protocol), with only passing mention of the rest of the treatment approach. This leaves many EMDR trained clinicians unsure how to identify clients for whom EMDR may be appropriate, how to prepare their clients adequately for EMDR, and how to identify appropriate targets(and target order) for EMDR. In this workshop participants will learn, and practice, how to conceptualize a case from a trauma perspective, so that the clients' presenting problems can be directly related to the clients trauma/loss history. Participants will learn, and practice, explaining this to their clients, so they can develop a treatment plan (including EMDR) accordingly. Participants will learn a phase model of trauma treatment that is consistent with EMDR while providing more detailed guidance in phases 1,2, and 8 of the EMDR protocol. Participants will learn a systematic approach to preparing clients for EMDR. Participants will also learn, and practice, applying this model in asystematic way to problem-solving their own challenging cases, as well as to supervision and consultation.
Keywords: Consultation Practice
98. Greenwald, R. (1999, June). Child trauma measures for research and practice. Poster session presented at the annual meeting of the EMDR International Association, Las Vegas, NV.
Language: English
Format: Conference
Abstract: This is a practical guide to objectively scored measures of child/adolescent post-traumatic stress symptoms. It is geared to the field-based researcher and the practicing clinician, who must balance scientific value with the limitations inherent in clinical practice settings. This is not a comprehensive review, but rather a selective sampling of those instruments most likely to be usefbl in the above contexts. Additional information on child trauma assessment is available at www.childtrauma.com or by contacting the author.
99. Greenwald, R. (1999, October 13 Updated). January, 1997 Update on The information gap in the EMDR controversy(Greenwald, 1966). Child Trauma Institute.
Language: English
Format: Journal
Abstract: This entry complements EMDR 1114. In the 1996 article I argued that EMDR has been shown to be quite effective, particularly as a treatment for specific traumatic memories; and that contrary results can be explained by substandard practice (i.e., that EMDR per se was not being tested). It would follow that well-designed studies, involving therapists who are careful to use the EMDR protocol correctly, should yield positive results. In the case of EMDR, these results should be not merely equal to other established treatments, but far superior, as in other, similar studies.
100. Greenwald, R. (2007, May). EMDR practice guidelines: EMDR with children. Unknown.
Language: English
Format: Other
Abstract: Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing [EMDR] (Shapiro, 1989) is a treatment technique during which accelerated processing of traumatic memory is facilitated through the shifting of attention between the left and right hemispheres of the brain. The methods utilized to facilitate the rapid switching of attention include the use of tapping, eye movement or sound. EMDR has also been beneficial in treating other disorders and conditions, i.e. grief and loss, low self esteem, anger management, depression etc. Its use should not be limited to only trauma or anxiety disorders. The methods utilized to facilitate the rapid switching of attention include the use of tapping, eye movement or sound.
Keywords: Practice Guidelines Children
101. Greenwald, R. (2009, August). Writing for the Journal of EMDR Practice & Research. Paper presented at the annual meeting of the EMDR International Association, Atlanta, GA.
Language: English
Format: Conference
Abstract: Many EMDR therapists have something to contribute to the field, but may be unsure about how to write a paper for a scholarly journal. Participants in this workshop will learn to identify the types of papers that might be submitted and how to determine in which category their own project belongs. Participants will also learn a clear structured model for composing a paper, so it will have its best chance of favorable review. Finally, participants will be guided to evaluate their own project and develop a plan to bring the project to publication.
Keywords: Writing
102. Hammond, D. C. (1991, Summer). In search of rapid, magical cures for trauma: The eye movement desensitization and reprocessing technique. ASCH, Clinical Exchange Corner, 32(2), 7-8.
Language: English
Format: Newsletter
Abstract: Many of us are experienced enough to have observed the bandwagons of enthusiams as psychotherapy fads and trends have come and gone, each accompaied by overzealous claims. We don't hear much anymore about Transactional Analysis or marathon encounter groups, and rolling only seems to be popular in California. Over 400 brands of psychotherapy have appeared claiming to be "the one-true-light," only to subsequently fade away. We joke about how we better use new miracle drugs quickly while expections for effectiveness are still high.
103. Hare, G. K. (1992, September). Eye movement desensitization and reprocessing: Major step forward or much ado about nothing?. the Behavior Therapist, 15, 179-180.
Language: English
Format: Journal
Abstract: Have you ever looked empathically at a client and said something like, "I wish I had a magic wand that I could just wave over your forehead and all your problems would go away"? Iknow Ihave. The rest of the story, of course, is telling the client, " But there is no magic wand. You'll have to work hard. Change will come slowiy. The old way will be the easy way, etc." Or, is there a magic wand?
104. Henry, S. (1994). How does EMDR work, anyway?. EMDR Network Newsletter, 4(1), 4-5.
Language: English
Format: Newsletter
Abstract: The following speculations are submitted to stimulate discussion and perhaps research about some of the primary neuropsychological processes involved in Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR).
105. Hensley, B. (2009). An EMDR Primer: From practicum to practice. New York, NY: Springer.
Language: English
Format: Book
Abstract: This book is intended to be a primer for use as a companion to Dr Francine Shapiro's textbook. It serves as a comprehensive review of the Adaptive Information Processing (AIP) Model and EMDR principles, protocols and procedures for the newly trained in EMDR and for experienced clinicians who want to review the principles.
Keywords: Theory Practice Primer
106. Herbert, J. D. (2003, July). The science and practice of empirically supported treatments. Behavior Modification, 27(3), 412-430.
Language: English
Format: Journal
Abstract: Despite impressive gains over the past three decades in the development and evaluation of empirically supported psychotherapies, such treatments are not used widely by front-line practicing clinicians. In an attempt to address this science-practice gap, efforts have turned recently to constructing lists of empirically supported treatments (ESTs) and disseminating information about these treatments to professionals and the public. This effort has been met with criticism, however, by both practitioners, on one hand, and psychotherapy researchers on the other. The current procedures for identifying ESTs are critically reviewed, and recommendations are offered to improve the scientific viability of the process. It is argued that lists of ESTs are viewed most productively as one step toward the development of best practice guidelines.
Keywords: Empirically Supported Treatments, ESTs, Psychotherapy Dissemination Evidence-Based Medicine Psychotherapy
107. Herbert, J. D., & Mueser, K. T. (1995, August). What is EMDR?. The Harvard Mental Health Letter, 12(2), 8.
Language: English
Format: Newsletter
Abstract: EMDR may seem innocuous, but it is not. There are well-established, validated treatments for many of the conditions for which EMDR is being recommended. Patients should not be induced to forgo established treatments for the sake of an unproven therapy -in effect, participating in a research project -when they cannot give informed consent because they are not told about the altern a t'I ves. Furthermore, public trust in the mental healtll professions is eroded when faddish treatments make exaggerated claims that inevitably fall under the weight of scientificevidence and the disillusionment of practitioners.
108. Hiroaki, K. (1999). The development of EMDR. Kokoro no Rinsho Arakaruto, 18(1), 7-13.
Language: English
Format: Journal
Abstract: No abstract available.
109. Hornsveld, H. K., & Berendsen, S. A. (2009). Casusboek EMDR, 25 voorbeelden uit de praktijk - [EMDR book case, 25 examples from practice]. Uitgeverij: Bohn Stafleu Van Loghum, 358 paginas.
Language: Dutch
Format: Book
Abstract: Circa twintig jaar geleden werd EMDR (Eye Movement Desensitisation and Reprocessing) ontwikkeld als behandelvorm voor Post Traumatische Stress Stoornissen (PTSS ). Na aanvankelijke scepsis is EMDR inmiddels opgenomen in (inter)nationale richtlijnen voor de behandeling van PTSS en wordt het ook bij veel andere klachtengebieden toegepast.
110. Huson, N. & Wijk, K. Van (2001). EMDR en non-specifieke motivering: Een casuistisch verhaal - [EMDR and non-specific reasons: A casuistic story]. DTH - Kwartaalschrift voor Directieve Therapie en Hypnose, 21(3), 219-228.
Language: Dutch
Format: Journal
Keywords: Theory Practice Casuistic Reasoning
111. Ichii, M. (1999). EMDR: Theory and practice. Japanese Journal of Psychotherapy, 25(4), 329-336 .
Language: English
Format: Journal
Abstract: No abstract available.
112. Ichii, M. (1999). EMDR: Theory and practice. Japanese Journal of Psychotherapy, 25(4), 329-336.
Language: English
Format: Journal
Abstract: No abstract available.
113. Ichii, M., & Hiroaki, K. (1999). Some points on EMDR (Eye movement desensitization and reprocessing). Kokoro no Rinsho Arakaruto, 18(1), 3-6.
Language: English
Format: Journal
Abstract: No abstract available.
114. Ichii, M., et al (2008, June). 〈特集〉EMDR…トラウマ治療の新常識 / Tokushu iemudiaru torauma chiryo no shinjoshiki - EMDR ... a new common sense of trauma treatment. こころのりんしょう [Mental clinical] a la carte, 27(2), Tokyo: Seiwashoten.
Language: Japanese
Format: Journal
115. Inobe, S. P. (2000). EMDR. In Corsini, R., Ed. Handbook of Innovative Psychotherapies, 2nd Edition. New York: John Wiley & Sons.
Language: English
Format: Book Section
Abstract: No abstract available.
116. ISSD. (2005). Guidelines for treating dissociative identity disorder in adults. Author, 149 pp.
Language: English
Format: Publication
Abstract: Controversy exists concerning the application of EMDR to the treatment of DID. There is empirical support for EMDR as an efficacious treatment for single-event PTSD, but there are little data on the efficacy of EMDR for complex PTSD and dissociative disorders. Both proponents and critics ofEMDRagree that additional research is needed to resolve questions about EMDR’s mechanism of action (Chemtob, Tolin, Van der Kolk, & Pitman, 2000). Based on research studies, some Task Force members have suggested that the beneficial effects of EMDR may come from the more careful attention to treatment structure, cognitive- behavioral interventions, and phase oriented planning for work on trauma as part of EMDR protocols, not the eye movements and related techniques.
Keywords: Practice Guidelines
117. Jackson, J. (2002, Jan 28). EMDR offers new treatment for trauma... eye movement desensitization and reprocessing. Nursing Spectrum -- New England Edition, 6(2), 17.
Language: English
Format: Other
118. Jackson, J. (2002, April 8). EMDR offers new treatment for trauma. Nursing Spectrum – New York 2 pages.
Language: English
Format: Magazine
119. Karlsson, A. (2002). Eye movement desensitization and reprocessing (EMDR): En presentation och analys av metoden, samt redogörelse för svenska utövares upplevelser - [Eye Movement desensitization and processing (EMDR): A presentation and analysis of the method, and explanation of Swedish practitioners' experiences]. Psykologexamensarbete Stockholms Universersit Psyckologiska Institutionen. .
Language: Swedish
Format: Other
Abstract: Posttraumatiskt stressyndrom är en komplex och mångdimensionell störning. Lyckligtvis finns det effektiva behandlingsmetoder. 1989 utvecklade Francine Shapiro metoden, sedermera namngiven, Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR), för behandling av traumatiska minnen. Det hävdas att mellan 84 – 100% som behandlats med EMDR inte längre uppfyller diagnoskriterierna för PTSD. Uppsatsens huvudsyfte är att göra en grundläggande granskning av EMDR och metodtillämpningen i Sverige. Datainsamling skedde genom litteraturgranskning, enkätundersökning samt intervjuer med EMDR-utbildade kliniker. Resultatet visar att EMDR är effektivare än ingen behandling alls eller icke-validerade behandlingsmetoder, såsom aktivt lyssnande. Det är däremot inte styrkt att EMDR är effektivare än KBT. Vidare antyder komponentstudier att ögonrörelsestimulering, eller alternativ bilateral stimulering, inte är nödvändig för att uppnå behandlingsframgångar. Samtliga intervjuade utövare upplever EMDR som ett värdefullt och verksamt verktyg i behandlingsarbetet. Diskussion förs kring resultaten från effektstudierna och nödvändigheten av fortsatt forskning.
Keywords: PTSD Effektstudier Komponentstudier Svenska Utövares Upplevelser Impact Studies Component Studies Swedish practice Travel Experiences
120. Kiessling, R. (2005). Integrating resource development strategies into your EMDR practice. In R. Shapiro, (Ed.), EMDR solutions: Pathways to healing (pp. 57-87). New York: W W Norton & Co..
Language: English
Format: Book Section
Abstract: As EMDR became more accepted within the psychotherapy community and more clinicians became trained, a greater number of clients with diagnoses other than PTSD were introduced to it. As a result, it became apparent that some of these more difficult, complex clients were not immediately ready for EMDR targeting and reprocessing. Many were either too unstable, had affect tolerance issues, or lacked the ego strengths to withstand the potential rigors of target desensitization. Others lacked needed coping skills, lacked the ability to recognize that they have the tools available to address their issues, or were fearful of addressing their traumatic experiences. Resource Development and Installation (RDI) strategies were developed and, over time, have been accepted within the EMDR community as valuable solutions for these challenging clients. [Text, p. 57]
Keywords: Psychotherapeutic Processes Life Experiences Survivors
121. Kiessling, R. (2000, September). Integrating the EMDR approach into your clinical practice. Paper presented at the annual meeting of the EMDR International Association, Toronto, Ontario Canada.
Language: English
Format: Conference
Abstract: Participants will: 1) be able to understand and utilize the EMDR approach in treatment conceptualization, planning, and reprocessing; 2) learn to identify and integrate their years of clinical training and experience seamlessly into their EMDR treatment sessions; and 3) through a live interactive demonstration, practice advanced cognitive interweave strategies based on their clinican training and experience.
122. Kiessling, R. (2006, September). From BLS to EMDR: Treating survivors of trauma, natural disaster, and combat along a time and stability continuum. Paper presented at the annual meeting of the EMDR International Association, Philadelphia, PA.
Language: English
Format: Conference
Abstract: The Comprehensive treatment protocols and treatment outcomes of EMDR have been well researched and documented. The calming effects of bilateral stimulation (BLS) and its impact on having images fade have also been documented. Consequently, there are many situations where stabilization and symptom reduction may be appropriate and/or necessary, such as trauma from terrorism, natural disasters and combat. This workshop will discuss a number of Bilateral Stimulation (BLS) interventions along a time and client stability continuum. Participants will learn and hone their skills using a number of stabilization and symptom reduction interventions through lecture, video and live demonstration, as well as small group practice of these more truncated, target specific, symptom desensitization protocols. Additionally, participants will understand when to select these interventions in preparing the client for the comprehensive EMDR treatment protocols.
123. Kim, S. U. (2004). Desensitization & reprocessing in EMDR. Paper presented at the Annual Conference of the Korean Neuropsychiatric Association, Gyeongju, Korea.
Language: English
Format: Conference
124. Kim, S. U. (2004). EMDR. Paper presented at the annual conference of Korean Women Psychiatrists, Seoul, Korea.
Language: English
Format: Conference
125. Kim, S. U. (2004). EMDR. Journal of Society of Korean Women Psychiatrists, 5, 34-41.
Language: English
Format: Journal
126. Kleiner, S. A. (1998). The practice of eye movement desesitization and reprossing (EMDR): Fidelity to an evolving protocol. California School of Professional Psychology, Los Angeles. --.
Language: English
Format: Dissertation/Thesis
Abstract: (Psy.D)
Keywords: Fidelity
127. Kleiner, S. A. (1999, June). The practice of EMR–Fidelity to an evolving protocol: Survey results. Paper presented at the annual meeting of the EMDR Internatonal Association, Las Vegas, NV.
Language: English
Format: Conference
Abstract: Particpants will: 1) learn three characterstics of clinicians who participated in the survey; 2) identify three characteristics of EMDR clientele as identified by the survey; and 3) identify three fidelity issues related to the practice of EMDR.
Keywords: Survey Results Fidelity Issues
128. Klugman, J. J. (1997). Eye movement desensitization reprocessing (EMDR): Is it compatible with the practice of depth psychotherapy?. Pacifica Graduate Institute, Carpinteria, CA. --.
Language: English
Format: Dissertation/Thesis
Abstract: Thesis--(M.A.)
129. Koppel, H. (2002, February). High-speed therapy. CPJ: Counselling & Psychotherapy Journal, 13(1), 20-21 .
Language: English
Format: Journal
Abstract: While many therapies comprise beautiful theories and limited results, EMDR has silly theories and excellent results. Excited to come across a technique which might speed up the processing of traumatic events, Hanno Koppel booked himself on to an EMDR training course.[Author]
130. Korn, D., Rozelle D., & Weir, J. (2005, June). Bringing EMDR research into practice. Paper presented at the annual meeting of the EMDR Europe Association, Brussels, Belgium.
Language: English
Format: Conference
131. Lagerkvist, S. (2009, January 7). Eye movement desensitization and reprocessing, EMDR. ASP BLADET, [4 pages].
Language: Swedish
Format: Newsletter
132. Laliotis, D. (1998, July). Integrating EMDR into a clinical practice. Paper presented at the annual meeting of the EMDR International Association, Baltimore, MD.
Language: English
Format: Conference
Abstract: Participants will be able to: 1) describe how they might modify their standard clinical assessment procedures in order to improve the linkage between evaluation and EMDR treatment; 2) report an enhanced level of confidence employing EMDR with client populations they are qualified to treat; and 3) report an improved understanding of issues relted to billing, informed consent, and managing referrals for EMDR.
Keywords: Clinical Integration
133. Laliotis, D. (2009). Creating new possibilities with EMDR. Paper presented at the Psychotherapy Networker Conference, Washington, DC.
Language: English
Format: Conference
134. Lamprecht, F. (2000). Spuren im körper, erinnerungen und EMDR. In F. Lamprecht, Praxis der Traumatherapie: was kann EMDR leisten?; [mit Therapieführer] (pp. 36-62) Stuttgart: Pfeiffer bei Klett-Cotta.
Language: German
Format: Book Section
Abstract: No abstract available.
135. Lamprecht, F. (2006). Praxisbuch EMDR: Modifizierungen für spezielle anwendungsgebiete - [Praxisbuch EMDR: Modifications for special applications]. Stuttgart: Klett-Cotta.
Language: German
Format: Book
Abstract: Kurzbeschreibung Weiterentwicklung der erfolgreichen EMDR-Methode Mit EMDR steht nicht nur eine wirksame Vorgehensweise bei der Traumaverarbeitung zur Verfügung. Der Band zeigt, wie auch traumabedingte Ängste, Schmerzen, Depressionen, Suchtverhalten und dissoziative Störungen mit diesem effektiven Ansatz behandelt werden können. Klappentext EMDR (Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing) ist als Behandlungsform für traumatisierte Menschen in ihrer Wirkweise von der neurologischen Forschung umfassend bestätigt: Traumatisierungen verursachen häufig eine dysfunktionale Informationsverarbeitung im Gehirn, die zu quälenden Wiederholungen des traumatischen Ablaufs ohne Verarbeitungsmöglichkeiten führt. Dieser Kreislauf kann mit der »Augenbewegungstechnik«, die immer in eine sorgfältige psychotherapeutische Behandlung einzubinden ist, unterbrochen werden.
136. Lamprecht, F. (2000). Praxis der traumatherapie: Was kann EMDR leisten? [mit Therapieführer] - [Practice of trauma therapy: What can EMDR?]. Stuttgart: Pfeiffer bei Klett-Cotta.
Language: German
Format: Book
Abstract: Mit Therapieführer EMDR (Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing) wurde 1989 von Francine Shapiro als eine neue Methode zur Behandlung traumatisierter Menschen vorgestellt. Die »Augenbewegungs-Desensibilisierungstherapie« gilt als spektakuläres Verfahren, weil sich in vielen Fällen bereits nach wenigen Behandlungen erstaunliche Besserungen einstellten. Traumatische Bilder und Erinnerungen werden in EMDR-Sitzungen bearbeitet, indem der Klient diese intensiv wiedererlebt, während er gleichzeitig eine Wahrnehmungsaufgabe erfüllt: Mit den Augen folgt er der sich hin und her bewegenden Hand des Therapeuten. Dies leitet auf neuronaler Ebene einen beschleunigten Verarbeitungsprozeß ein; belastende Erinnerungen verblassen, und neue, konstruktivere Gedanken können an ihre Stelle treten. Inzwischen wurde das Verfahren in vielen unabhängigen Studien überprüft und als effektive Behandlungstechnik bestätigt. Friedhelm Lamprecht war einer der ersten Psychotherapeuten, die EMDR erlernten und anwendeten. So gehören er und sein Autorenteam zu den wenigen Fachleuten, die in der Lage sind, über eigene Anwendungserfahrungen zu berichten, die Methode kritisch zu beurteilen, ihre Möglichkeiten und Grenzen zu beschreiben, eigene statistische Erfahrungswerte vorzulegen und selbstentwickelte Weiterführungen darzustellen. Darüber hinaus gibt das Buch eine allgemeine Einführung in die Theorie und Praxis heutiger Traumatherapie und enthält einen Therapieführer. Da sich EMDR sowohl in den verhaltenstherapeutischen als auch in den psychoanalytischen Therapierahmen einfügt, ist das Buch für eine breite professionelle Leserschaft von Interesse. Mit Beiträgen von Ursula Gast, Wolfgang Lempa, Martin Sack. »Der hohe Informationswert des Buches basiert einesteils darauf, dass Friedhelm Lamprecht und sein Autorenteam im deutschsprachigen Bereich mit zu den ersten Psychotherapeuten gehörten, die EMDR erlernt haben. Infolgedessen vermochten sie für ihre psychotraumatologische Forschungsarbeit eine hohe Kompetenz einzubringen. Andererseits erhält das Buch auch dadurch eine attraktive Note, dass die Befunde in den verschiedenartigen Settings eines Universitätskrankenhauses erhoben wurden.« Hellmuth Freyberger (Psychotherapie, Psychosomatik, medizinische Psychologie)
137. Lee, C. (2009, June). Understanding EMDR: A history of practice guiding science. Keynote presented at the annual meeting of the EMDR Europe Association, Amsterdam, the Netherlands.
Language: English
Format: Conference
Keywords: Keynote
138. Lehrer, P. M., Woolfolk, R. L., & Sime, W. E. (2007). Principles and practice of stress management (3rd ed.). New York, NY, US: Guilford Press. (2007). xvii, 734 pp..
Language: English
Format: Book
Abstract: Recent years have seen significant advances in understanding psychosocial stress and its clinical management. Now in a thoroughly revised and expanded third edition, this comprehensive work reviews effective stress management techniques and their applications for treating psychological problems and enhancing physical health and performance. Bringing together recognized leaders in the field to present their respective approaches and demonstrate the nuts and bolts of intervention, the volume is structured for optimal use as a clinical reference and text. All chapters retained from the prior edition have been extensively rewritten, and many new chapters have been added. Part I examines conceptual foundations and describes basic mechanisms of stress and relaxation. Part II, the largest section, covers the full range of methods, including progressive relaxation, hypnosis, biofeedback, meditation, cognitive methods, and other therapies. Each tightly edited chapter: (1) Details the method's history, theoretical underpinnings, and evidence base; (2) Spells out assessment procedures and techniques; (3) Provides step-by-step implementation guidelines; (4) Considers common treatment obstacles and how to overcome them; (5) Discusses strategies for increasing patient motivation and adherence; and (6) Illustrates the method with an in-depth case example. New to the third edition are chapters on mindfulness meditation, neurofeedback, EMDR, breathing retraining, heart rate variability biofeedback, exercise therapy, and Qigong. Finally, Part III explores applications in mental health, behavioral medicine, and sport psychophysiology (another new topic in this edition), shedding light on which approaches are most suitable for particular problems. The concluding chapter reviews the clinical research literature and offers clear recommendations for improving outcomes. This timely, authoritative book is an indispensable resource for clinical and health psychologists, psychiatrists, social workers, counselors, nurses, and other professionals interested in learning and using stress management techniques. It will serve as a text in graduate-level courses in stress management, behavioral medicine, social work in health care, and related areas. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2008 APA, all rights reserved)
Keywords: Stress Management
139. Lescano, R. O., & Arazi, D. (2005). Trauma y EMDR: Un nuevo abordaje terapéutico - [Trauma and EMDR: A new therapeutic approach]. Buenos Aires: EMDRIA Latinoamerica.
Language: Spanish
Format: Book
Abstract: Este libro, el primero sobre EMDR escrito por un grupo de profesionales argentinos, incluye tres partes: La primera es “ Trauma y Teorías asociadas ”: en estos capítulos se explora la historia de las teorías actuales, llegando a la redefinición de algunas categorías diagnósticas, consecuencia de una nueva manera de ver el efecto de las experiencias traumáticas sobre los individuos. Proceso que involucra aspectos biológicos, psicológicos, familiares y sociales.
La segunda parte, “ EMDR: un nuevo abordaje terapéutico ”, incluye capítulos teóricos sobre el método bajo la supervisión de los trainers habilitados por el EMDR Institute. Los capítulos van desde la teoría básica del EMDR, pasando por la creatividad hasta llegar a la compleja especulación neurobiológica de su funcionamiento.
El conocimiento del cerebro junto con “la inspiración de la Dra. Shapiro que condujo al descubrimiento y desarrollo del EMDR, son los puntales del método y su vínculo con la creatividad. El reprocesamiento con EMDR es también un proceso esencialmente creativo, fundamental para poder levantar el bloqueo resultante del trauma. La relación terapéutica que se instala durante el reprocesamiento de EMDR puede ser conceptualizada como un proceso co-creativo (D. Grand Ph.D.)
La tercera parte incluye casos clínicos, como corresponde a un libro dedicado a una técnica de demostrada eficacia.
This book, the first on EMDR written by a group of Argentine professionals, consists of three parts: the first is "Trauma and associated theory": these chapters explores the history of current theories reaching the redefinition of some diagnostic categories, result of a new way to see the effect of traumatic experiences on individuals. Process involving biological, psychological, family and social aspects.
The second part, "EMDR: a new therapeutic approach", includes theoretical chapters on the method under the supervision of the enabled trainers by the EMDR Institute. Chapters range from basic theory of the EMDR, passing through the creativity to complex operation neurobiological speculation.
Knowledge of the brain along with "the inspiration of the DRA." Shapiro that led to the discovery and development of the EMDR are the underpinnings of the method and its link with the creativity. Reprocessing with EMDR is also a process essentially creative, fundamental to lift the trauma resulting blocking. The therapeutic relationship installed during reprocessing of EMDR can be conceptualized as a co-creative process (D. Grand Ph.d..)
140. Lichti, J. (2007, September). EMDR consultation: Using practice research to develop best practices. Paper presented at the annual meeting of the EMDR International Association, Dallas, TX.
Language: English
Format: Conference
Abstract: This workshop will review the context of EMDR consultation. The differences between therapy, consultation and consultation-of-consultation will be highlighted. The implications of the literature on clinical supervision/consultation will be reviewed. Examples of tools and resources for consultants will be presented. Research on the practices of EMDRIA Approved Consultants will be presented. Best Practices emerging from the literature and consultation practices research will be identified. Participants will analyze their own consultation practices using all the above information and discuss in small groups how they plan to improve their consultation services.
Keywords: Consultation
141. Lichti, J. (2009, August). Improving EMDR consultation: Using practice research to develop best practices. Paper presented at the annual meeting of the EMDR International Association, Atlanta, GA.
Language: English
Format: Conference
Abstract: This workshop is for EMDRIA Approved Consultants, Consultants-In-Training and those seriously considering becoming Approved Consultants. We will review the context of EMDR consultation and identify the differences between therapy, consultation and consultation-of-consultation. The implications of the supervision/consultation literature will be reviewed, and the tools, resources, and recordings from actual consultations will be presented. Original research on the practices of EMDRIA Approved Consultants will be reviewed and Best Practices emerging from the literature and EMDR consultation research will be identified. Participants will use all the above information to analyze their own consultation practices and discuss with peers how to improve their consultation services.
Keywords: Consultation
142. Lichti, J. (2009, May). EMDR consultation: Using practice research to develop best practices. Paper presented at the EMDR Canada Conference, Vancouver, British Columbia Canada.
Language: English
Format: Conference
Abstract: This workshop is for Approved Consultants, Consultants-in-training and those considering becoming ACs. We will review the context of EMDR consultation and identify the differences between therapy, consultation and consultation-of-consultation [Objective 1]. The implications of the supervision/consultation literature will be reviewed [Objective 2]. Tools, resources and recordings from actual consultations will be presented. Original research about EMDR consultation will be reviewed. Best Practices emerging from the literature and EMDR consultation research will be identified [Objective 3]. Participants will use all the above information to analyze their own consultation practices [Objective 4] and discuss with peers how to improve their consultation services [Objective 5].
Keywords: Consultation
143. Lipke, H. (2003, December). Integrating EMDR into clinical work: When getting started is a problem. EMDRIA Newsletter, 8(4), 11-13.
Language: English
Format: Newsletter
Abstract: As EMDR is traditionally taught the components are each described and then combined for the practice sessions. When EMDR is then used with clients it is natural for therapists to expect themselves to apply it as a whole, with the exception of perhaps pairing eye movement with a “safe place” or “resource installation” exercise instead of a trauma processing protocal. For many new EMDR practitioners this is an effective and satisfactory way of introducing EMDR. For many others it does not work as well, for reasons such as differential comfort thresholds in trying a new method with a client, or having no clients who appear to meet the criteria for beginning EMDR. Because, in these, and other situations, it is difficult to bring the whole package to clients at once, the method doesn’t get used, even when the practitioner has had positive experiences in the training sessions.
Keywords: Practice
144. Lipke, H. (2001). EMDR und andere ansätze der psychotherapie - Ein integratives modell: Theoretische und klinische empfehlungen mit schwerpunkt auf traumatischem stress - [EMDR and other approaches of the psychotherapy - An inclusive model: Theoretical and clinical recommendations focusing on traumatischem stress]. Paderborn: Junfermann.
Language: German
Format: Book
Abstract: EMDR (Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing) wurde vor mehr als zehn Jahren von Dr. Francine Shapiro entwickelt und galt anfangs insbesondere aufgrund nachweislich sehr schneller und überzeugender Behandlungserfolge als eine der ungewöhnlichsten psychotherapeutischen Methoden überhaupt. Aufgrund der positiven Ergebnisse wissenschaftlicher Untersuchungen wird EMDR mittlerweile von vielen Therapeuten erfolgreich eingesetzt. Im Mittelpunkt des Buches steht das von Lipke entwickelte Vier-Aktivitäten-Modell, eine Ergänzung zu dem von Francine Shapiro (1995) entwickelten AIP-Modell der beschleunigten Informationsverarbeitung. Damit schafft Lipke einen Rahmen für das Verständnis psychotherapeutischer Arbeit im allgemeinen und für die Integration von Shapiros Theorie über die Verarbeitung dysfunktionaler Erinnerungen in die bisherigen Formen psychotherapeutischer Arbeit. Das vorgestellte Modell liefert eine Handlungsanleitung für die Anwendung von EMDR in der therapeutischen Praxis. Dabei kann Lipke auf seine fast dreißigjährige klinische Erfahrung mit traditionelleren Behandlungsansätzen ebenso zurückgreifen wie auf seine über zehnjährige Praxis in der Anwendung und Vermittlung von EMDR. Das Buch ist nicht als Einführung in die Theorie und Praxis von EMDR, sondern eher als Erläuterung der Arbeit mit dieser Methode in einem umfassenderen therapeutischen Zusammenhang gedacht.
145. Lister, D. (2000). EMDR in the context of general medical practice in the UK: 4 case reports. The EMDR Practitioner. Retrieved December 27, 2008, from http://www.emdr-practitioner.net/.
Language: English
Format: Journal
Abstract: Editorial note: This interesting article describes the use of EMDR in a very time-pressured general practice surgery. The description of the use of EMDR is unorthodox and must be considered anecdotal, especially the second case report. If readers have any comments on the descriptions given, please contact the editor. All responses to this article will be published on the emails to the editor page. [Editor] Abtract: Some EMDR cases that the author has conducted have taken long sessions outside of normal surgery hours, but a few have reached a successful conclusion within or nearly within the seven and a half minutes allocated to a GP consultation. Four such cases are reported here.[Author abstract]
Keywords: Medical Practice Case Study
146. Lobenstine, F. (2009, April 18). Integrating energy psychology into EMDR practice. Paper presented at the Western Massachusetts EMDRIA Conference "EMDR and the Body," Amherst, MA .
Language: English
Format: Conference
Abstract: This workshop will cover principles and practices of Energy Psychology (EP) that can be incorporated into clinical work and personal use. EP is a rich and diverse field based on Chinese medicine and the relevance of meridians and chi (essential energy) for emotional healing. The workshop will promote understanding of this 5,000 year old healing tradition.
Keywords: Energy Psychology
147. Lohrasbe, R. S., & Turner, D. (2009, May). To treat or not to treat? Legal Iimplications for EMDR practice. Paper presented at the EMDR Canada Conference, Vancouver, British Columbia Canada.
Language: English
Format: Conference
Abstract: Trauma survivors may be involved in either civil or criminal proceedings and EMDR therapists are faced with decisions of whether or not to treat these clients. Two major questions arise: 1) Should EMDR treatment be initiated? 2) If yes, what are the therapist’s obligations? This workshop seeks to assist the therapist in making informed decisions in collaboration with client and counsel when treatment and clinical records may influence legal proceedings. Suggestions for treatment planning, documentation and collaboration with all parties are provided.
Keywords: Legal Informed Consent Legal Proceedings Disclosure of Records Privacy
148. Lovett, J. (2008, 2009). Usando EMDR para ayudar a los niños a recuperarse de prácticas médicas traumáticas – [Using EMDR to help children recover from traumatic medical practices]. In P. Solvey & R. C. Ferrazzano de Solvey (Eds.), Terapias de avanzada - [Advanced therapies] : Vol. 5, Abordajes en EMDR : Trauma y disociacion – Ninos y adolescentes – Fertilidad, inferitilidad, y esterilidad - Psicoprofilaxis, quiruigica, adicciones - [Approaches in EMDR: Trauma and dissociation – Children and adolescents – Fertility, infertility, and sterility – Psychoprofilaxis, Surgery, Addictions] (1st ed) (pp. 201-247) Buenos Aires: TdeA Ediciones.
Language: Spanish
Format: Book Section
Abstract: No abstract available.
Keywords: Medical Abuse
149. Lovett, J. (2008, September). EMDR practice guidelines - EMDR with adults. Colorado Health Networks Clinical Guidelines, III(303), 1-4.
Language: English
Format: Publication
Abstract: Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing [EMDR] (Shapiro, 1989) is a treatment technique during which accelerated processing of traumatic memory is facilitated through the shifting of attention between the left and right hemispheres of the brain. The methods utilized to facilitate the rapid switching of attention include the use of tapping, eye movement or sound.
Keywords: Clinical Guidelines Reviewed Adults
150. Lui, L. (1996, July/August). Hand waving? An unconventional for post-traumatic stress is put to the test. The Sciences.
Language: English
Format: Other
Abstract: When Prometheus gave fire to the mortals, an angry Zeus chained him to Mount Causaus, where each day an eagle devoured his liver, and each night the liver grew back. Imagine for a moment that you must endure a variation of that Promethean hell. Instead of an eagle, your tormentor is a rapist, the murderer of your parents, a battlefield enemy who took away your legs and much more inside. For many people, the unbearable circumstances you are only imagining are real. The condition known as post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), forces it svictims to live the most traumatic events of their lives over and over again. Because the events are often wars, assaults or natural disasters, the persistence of memory alone would be difficult. But if you are a victim of PTSD, you may relive your tragic epiosde with such clarity that you can see the bloody bodies on the battlefield or smell the alcohol on your assailant's breath.
151. Lushin, P. (2000). The pychotherapeutic meaning of EMDR. Zhurnal Practicheskogo Psihologa [Journal of Practising Psychologist], 6, 85-90.
Language: English
Format: Journal
Abstract: The following paper deals with the problem of constructing the psychotherapeutic meaning of the basic procedure of EMDR, one of the well-known and effective therapeutic techniques for PTSD. The author generates a conceptual matrix interpreting EMDR in terms of hypnosis, desensitization and personality change. [Author's Abstract?]
152. Lutz, J. (2009, April 18). Integrating yogic postures, breathing techniques and deep relaxation with EMDR practice. Paper presented at the Western Massachusetts EMDRIA Conference "EMDR and the Body," Amherst, MA.
Language: English
Format: Conference
Abstract: This workshop will offer theoretical information on, research findings about, and an experience of, seated yoga postures, breathing practices and deep relaxation, including yoga nidra, which are currently being used in the healing of trauma. Specific applications to EMDR processing and resource development will be described.
Keywords: Yoga Breathing Relaxtion
153. MacCulloch, M. J. (1999). Eye movement desensitization and reprocessing. Advances in Psychiatric Treatment, 5, 120-12.
Language: English
Format: Journal
Abstract: Eye movement desensitisation and reprocessing (EMDR) was described by Shapiro (1989a,b)as a new method for treating post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). In May 1987, while walking in the park, Shapiro noticed that her own disturbing thoughts changed then disappeared "without any conscious effort" (Shapiro, 1995) when they had been tempor ally paired with diagonal upward to and fro eye movements. Over the next six months Shapiro worked with approximately 70 people to develop a procedure based on the temporal pairing of distressing images and thoughts with various eye movements. Shapiro began to develop strategies to unblock stalled emotional processing, which was initiated by EMDR in non-patients. She successfully tried the method on a Vietnam veteran suffering from severe PTSD and then embarked upon a trial of EMDR on a mixed group of victims of rape, molestation and Vietnam combat trauma. Initially, EMDR achieved wide recognition as a new break through treatment for PTSD. This was, in part, because of very positive early reports (e.g. Wolpe & Abrams, 1991), but also because the EMDR effect appeared to occur with unprecedented speed, often in cases of PTSD that had previously resisted treatment by many other methods over a long period.
154. Macready, N. (2001, April). Eye movement therapy soothes trauma victims. Clinical Psychiatry News, 29(4), 44-45.
Language: English
Format: Journal
Abstract: SAN DIEGO — When it comes to treating trauma victims, more controlled studies support the efficacy of eye movement desensitization and reprocessing than any other therapy, according to Dr. Francine Shapiro, who developed the approach. [Elsevier]
155. Maiberger, B. (2009). EMDR essentials: A guide for clients and therapists. New York: W. W. Norton. viii, 230 pp.
Language: English
Format: Book
Abstract: 1)In easy-to-understand terms, Barb Maiberger explains EMDR to clients and, in turn, equips clinicians with a shorthand way of explaining it to their own patients. Topics include understanding trauma and its symptoms, how and why EMDR works (and when it won't), how to find the right therapist, and sample relaxation exercises. 2)This book discusses eye movement desensitization and reprocessing (EMDR) therapy. Part I explains EMDR, the phases involved in treatment, the nature of trauma and its effect on memory. Theories about why EMDR works, how it can work for children, and safety issues are addressed. Part II provides illustrations from the author's experiences as an EMDR therapist, presenting client issues and how EMDR helped them. The author notes that the purpose of this book is to inform potential EMDR clients what to expect from EMDR therapy and how it may help in trauma healing. (PsycINFO Database)
156. Manfield, P., & Snyker, E. (2002, June). Don’t go with that!. Paper presented at the annual meeting of the EMDR International Association, San Diego, CA.
Language: English
Format: Conference
Abstract: One of the beauties of EMDR is that, in most cases, clients can simply begin each set of eye movements by focusing on their associations from the previous set. The therapist simply says, "Go with that." This workshop will identify clients for whom "Go with that" will probably not work, clients who use avoidance or dissociation to defend against painful affect or who associate loosely and cause targets to "pancake." We will use video and transcripts to illustrate a variety of interventions and techniques to handle these more challenging clients and situations.
157. Marich, J. N. (2008). Perceptions of EMDR amongst practicing clinicians: Preliminary findings and implications for practice setting. Capella University & PsyCare, Inc..
Language: English
Format: Other
Abstract: The efficacy of Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR) has been established through randomized controlled research and recognized by reputable clinical bodies. This article uses a mixed methodology to determine the knowledge and perceptual base of EMDR amongst a sampling of practicing clinicians, and to ascertain any significant correlations between clinician variables and their perceptions of EMDR. The qualitative component explores how a psychoeducational workshop on EMDR impacted the samplings’ perceptions of EMDR. The overall receptivity to the use of EMDR in clinical settings was positive, with very few of the participants indicating previous reception of negative material on EMDR. This article offers implications for implementing EMDR in public practice settings since the majority of the study’s participants practice in such settings.
Keywords: Clinician Variables Perceptions of EMDR
158. Markowitz, L. (1992, September-October). Easing trauma. Family Therapy Networker, 16(5), 10-11.
Language: English
Format: Journal
Abstract: For the first time, therapists may have a prcedure to quickly and effectively desensitize their traumatic memories. When psychologist Francine Shapiro first published her initial study on Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR) in 1989, many clinicians were skeptical, but since then some of the most eminent therapists in the trauma and behavior therapy fields have become convinced that EMDR is an important discovery.
159. Marshall, J. (1992). EMDR, a godsend in the healing process: An introduction to eye movement desensitization and reprocessing. A paper presented at the American Association of Christian Counselors Conference.
Language: English
Format: Conference
160. Martin, A. J. (2004). EMDR in the treatment of PTSD: A restrospective of a patient and therapist. Stress Points: Newsletter for the Australasian Society for Traumatic Stress Studies, 15-16.
Language: English
Format: Newsletter
Abstract: EMDR (Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing) is a therapy often used in the treatment of PTSD. During EMDR the patient focuses on emotionally disturbing experiences while stimulus such as eye movement or finger-tapping. This dual (internal/external) focus is combined with frequent, briefsimultaneously focusing on an external periods of focusing on new associations as they arise. Throughout the therapy, the therapist methodically rates the patient’s SUDs (Subjective Units of Disturbance) on a scale of 0 - 10, (“0” being the lowest amount of stress the patient is presently experiencing about the target issue; “10” being the highest); and VoCs (Validity of Cognition) on a scale of 1 - 7, (“1” being the lowest amount of belief the patient holds in a specific positive statement about himself; “7” being the highest amount - ie: the positive statement is “completely true.”)
161. Martin, N. (2001, July). Research in brief: Eye remember it well: Eye movements affect the vividness of your emotional memories. The Psychologist, 14(7), 376.
Language: English
Format: Journal
Abstract: Can eye movement reduce trauma? eye movement desensitisation and reprocessing (EMDR) has shown that people retrieving traumatic events while making 10–20 lateral eye movements, experienced less trauma than did those who simply reported the traumatic event without eye movement (see article on EMDR on p. 361). Students who either looked at a computer screen, tapped their fingers or followed a symbol across a computer screen with their eyes also reported significantly less vivid imagery of autobiographical events in the eye movement condition; images we re most vivid in the control condition. The results suggest that visuospatial working memory is disrupted by eye movement, reducing the vividness of the recollection. However, EMDR suggests that future recollections of the event should also be less vivid.
162. Maxfield, L. (1999, Nov). Relationship between efficacy and methodology in the treatment of PTSD with EMDR. In C. R. Figley (Chair), Review of neoteric trauma treatments and suggested practice guidelines. International Society for Traumatic Stress Studies, Miami, FL.
Language: English
Format: Conference
Keywords: Group Discussion
163. McCabe, S. (2004, September-October). EMDR: Implications of the use of reprocessing therapy in nursing practice. Perspectives in Psychiatric Care, 40(3), 104-113.
Language: English
Format: Journal
Abstract: TOPIC: Eye movement desensitization and reprocessing (EMDR).PURPOSE: To examine the available evidence base for EMDR treatment in psychiatric nursing practice. SOURCES: Evidenced-based research findings, published case and anecdotal reports, and primary source documents on the development of the treatment method. CONCLUSIONS: EMDR use remains controversial. Although it is safe, little is known regarding the mechanism of action of any therapeutic effect; more rigorous empirical establishment of efficacy is needed. SEARCH TERMS: Clinical efficacy, eye movement desensitization and reprocessing (EMDR). [Author Abstract]
Keywords: PTSD Literature Review Nursing
164. McGoldrick, J. (1997). Invisible force. Common Boundary.
Language: English
Format: Magazine
Abstract: Of course, not all therapists who learn TFT stick to it exclusively. Many combine talk therapy with both TFT and Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR), in which a client recalls a traumatic memory while moving his or her eyes in a prescribed pattern. While both therapies apparently break up long-held patterns, EMDR is usually described in terms of physiology, not energy. EMDR, practitioners say, reconnects the brain's neural networks that have been isolated by trauma.
Keywords: TFT Energy Psychology Theory Practice
165. Melbeck, H. H. (2003, March). Was ist EMDR? - [What is EMDR?]. EMDR Vortragstext.
Language: German
Format: Other
166. Miller, N., Lazignac, C., Jecker, F., Zürcher, M., & Damsa, C. (2009). Etats de stress post traumatiques en médecine de premier recours: guides diagnostiques et thérapeutiques a partir d'une etude originale[Transliterated title] - [Post-traumatic stress disorders in medical practice: diagnostic and therapeutic guidelines in primary care]. Bulletin De La Société Des Sciences Médicales Du Grand-Duché De Luxembourg, 1, 67-78.
Language: French
Format: Journal
Abstract: Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is a prevalent and disabling condition. The patients suffering from PTSD often consult primary care clinician for non-specific symptoms. The aim of this work is to find out useful clinical guidelines for diagnosis and therapy in primary care, starting from a literature review (1981-2009) and a preliminary observational study. 20 patients with PTSD had a specific trauma-focused psychotherapy, called "Trauma and Reintegration Psychotherapy (TRP)". This is a psychodynamic eclectic treatment combining Ericksonian Hypnosis and EMDR techniques. The results show a more important decrease of PTSD symptoms in patient's beneficiating of the TRP, than the average of the usual clinical studies. This could be linked to an early diagnosis made by the primary care general practitioners. (MEDLINE)
167. Mills, S. (1998). Worst case scenarios: Client fantasies during and after traumatic experiences using EMDR therapy. Trauma Response, 32.
Language: English
Format: Magazine
Abstract: Standard EMDR (Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing) technique consists of repeatedly pairing recollections of the uauma with sets of eye movements. until patients' subjective levels of distress (SUDS) are dissipated for each and every aspect of the trauma. Once major elements of the event are desensitized, minor elements which were "overshadowed" or "crowded out" by the major elements of the event may surface. It is necessary to ensure that all associations and details of the trauma are recounted and desensitized by the therapist's use of EMDR.
Keywords: Theory Practice Fantasies
168. Monaco, A., Evans, D., & Maccio, E. M. (2000, October). Eye movement desensitization and reprocessing EMDR. Paper presented at the Child & Family Services of Western New York, Buffalo, NY.
Language: English
Format: Conference
169. Moore, R. (2001). EMDR offers hope – an effective treatment for trauma. Massachusetts Office for Victim Assistance, Victim Impact, 2(1), 5.
Language: English
Format: Journal
Abstract: Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR) is a procedure that is increasingly used in psychotherapy to help victims reduce the impact of negative experiences from the past that intrude on present day life. Often these negative life experiences involve a trauma such as sexual assault, abuse, a car crash, or the murder of a loved one.
170. Morgan, S. (2008, October 17). Unlocking and unblocking the ties that bind us. Paper presented at the BACP annual conference, Telford, UK.
Language: English
Format: Conference
Abstract: Dr Francine Shapiro, psychologist and Senior Research Fellow at the Mental Research Institute in Palo Alto, USA discovered the powerful effect of eye movements in 1987. She then developed and researched a psychotherapeutic approach called EMDR (Eye Movement Desensitisation and Reprocessing) which is now widely acknowledged as a highly effective treatment for PTSD (post traumatic stress disorder). In 2005 it was validated by NICE as a preferred treatment for PTSD. There are now over 4,000 EMDR trained therapists in the UK and Ireland, from a wide variety of theoretical backgrounds, integrating EMDR into their treatment of numerous presenting psychological problems.
171. Morgan, S. (2006, April). EMDR comes of age. Therapy Today, 17(3), 35-37.
Language: English
Format: Journal
Abstract: Less than 20 years after Dr Francine Shapiro discovered Eye Movement Desensitisation and Reprocessing (EMDR), its effectiveness as a psychological treatment is well established. [Journal]
172. Muller-Paiser, V. (2008, December). Letting go of fear, learn how eye movement desensitization and reprocessing (EMDR). Dressage Today, 22-23.
Language: English
Format: Magazine
173. Murphy-Shigematsu, S., & Murakawa, N. (2001, December). トラウマ治療のためのEMDR - [EMDR for trauma: Eye movement desensitization and reprocessing: Psychotherapies for specific problems and population, Vol. 4]. Japanese Institute for Psychotherapy: Tokyo.
Language: Japanese
Format: Video
Abstract: A translation of the educational video produced by APA.
174. Nanninga, R. (2004, March). Een Doorn in het oog - Het omstreden succes van EMDR - [AN eyesore: The controversial success of EMDR]. Bron: Skepter, 17(1), 1-12.
Language: Dutch
Format: Journal
Abstract: EMDR is een nieuwe psychotherapie voor mensen die last hebben van traumatische herinneringen. De methode is in korte tijd erg populair geworden onder psychologen. Maar volgens critici is er niks nieuws onder de zon.
175. Norcross, J. C. (2007, September). Psychotherapy relationships that work: Evidence-based practices in EMDR. Paper presented at the annual meeting of the EMDR International Assocation, Dallas, TX.
Language: English
Format: Conference
Abstract: Decades of clinical experience and controlled research consistently demonstrate that the therapy relationship accounts for as much psychotherapy success as the treatment method itself. This plenary address will present evidence-based practices on: (1) creating a facilitative therapeutic relationship; and (2) tailoring that relationship to the individual patient in ways that improve treatment outcome. These practices are then applied specifically to the different phases of EMDR. The talk synthesizes three of the most crucial developments in contemporary mental health: evidence-based practice, the therapeutic relationship, and EMDR.
Keywords: Evidence-Based Practices
176. Nurse, R. (1996, Summer). Practice: Clinical notebook--Eye movement desensitization and reprocessing: A stealth-like approach to family of origin issues. The Family Psychologist, 12(3).
Language: English
Format: Newsletter
Abstract: This newsletter discusses Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR), an emerging psychotherapeutic method. Topics include: research on EMDR, a symposium on EMDR, the ethics of training with EMDR, the process of EMDR, training in EMDR, and a new resource article on EMDR.
Keywords: Psychotherapeutic Techniques
177. Oren, U. (2002). EMDR. EMDR - Israel Association.
Language: Hebrew
Format: Publication
Abstract: היא שיטת טיפול אינטגרטיביתEMDR ( Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing) היא שיטת טיפול אינטגרטיבית שהוכיחה את יעילותה בטיפול במגוון של תלונות נפשיות הקשורות בין היתר לטראומה ולחרדה. מחקרים רבים מראים ששיטת EMDR מסוגלת להביא לעיבוד מהיר של זכרונות טראומטיים, המביאים לשינויים קוגניטיביים ורגשיים יציבים, ולהקלה ניכרת בסימפטומים התנהגותיים-גופניים. השיטה פותחה בסוף שנות ה-80 על ידי הפסיכולוגית האמריקנית ד"ר פרנסין שפירו ומאז עברו את ההכשרה עשרות אלפי מטפלים בכל העולם, ומתוכם למעלה מ- 750 מטפלים בישראל.
EMDR (Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing) is a method of handling the tremendous attested the effectiveness in treating a variety of complaints related psychological trauma, among others. Many studies show that EMDR able to bring quick processing of traumatic memories, leading to changes in a stable, and emotional and behavioral-physical symptoms significantly.
178. Ost, J., & Easton, S. (2006). NICE recommends EMDR for Post Traumatic Stress Disorder: Why?. Clinical Psychology Forum, 159, 23-26.
Language: English
Format: Journal
Abstract: Summary: This paper reviews the promotion in the National Institute for Clinical Excellence (NICE) Guidelines for the treatment of Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) (March 2005) of Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR) as an equivalent to Cognitive-Behavioural Therapy (CBT).
Keywords: NICE Practice Guidelines
179. Parnell, L. (2008). A therapist's guide to EMDR tools and techniques for successful treatment. Princeton, NJ: Recording for Blind & Dyslexic.
Language: English
Format: Audio
Abstract: [This book] offers therapists an all-in-one, practical handbook for ... using EMDR in their practices.... [It] bridges the gap between EMDR training and actual practice by identifying and exploring the four areas where most EMDR-trained therapists need help: case formulation, ego strengthening, target development, and processing difficulties. [Dust jacket]
180. Parnell, L. (2009, December). EMDR: A trauma therapy power-tool. Paper presented at the 21st International Psychology of Health, Immunity & Disease Conference, Hilton Head, SC.
Language: English
Format: Conference
Abstract: Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR) is a revolutionary, powerful therapeutic method for healing the devastation of trauma. In addition to the treatment of PTSD, EMDR can treat the psychological effects of smaller traumas related to symptoms of depression, anxiety, phobias, low self-esteem, creativity blocks and relationship difficulties. Not only can healing occur more rapidly with EMDR than in traditional therapy, but the clearing of emotional/physical blockages results in positive spirituality.
181. Paulsen, S. L. (1994). Eye Movement desensitization and reprocessing. Symposium (S. L Paulsen, Chair) at the annual meeting of the Hawaii Psychological Association, Honolulu, HI.
Language: English
Format: Conference
Keywords: Symposium Theory Practice
182. Paulsen, S. L. (1993). EMDR. In R. Corsini, Encyclopedia of psychology, 2nd Ed. New York: Wiley & Sons.
Language: English
Format: Book Section
Abstract: No abstract available.
183. Paulsen, S. L. (1992). EMDR. Paper presented at the annual meeting of the Hawaii Psychological Association, Honolulu, HI.
Language: English
Format: Conference
184. Paulsen, S. L. (1995). EMDR: A short term treatment. Paper presented at the IV Annual MEDICOT, European Conference on Traumatic Stress, Paris, France.
Language: English
Format: Conference
185. Paulsen, S. L. (1995). What EMDR means to psychologists as therapists and as clients. Paper presented at the annual meeting of the Minnesota Psychological Association, Brainerd, MN.
Language: English
Format: Conference
186. Perkins, B., & Rouanzoin, C. C. (2002, June). EMDR: Clarifying points of confusion and providing information. Paper presented at the annual meeting of the EMDR International Association, San Diego, CA.
Language: English
Format: Conference
Abstract: Confusion regarding EMDR has lead to the need for the education of clients and professionals alike. Participants will learn the theoretical, empirical, and historical issues regarding EMDR and 1) placebo effects; 2) exposure procedures; 3) the eye movement coponent; 4) treatment fidelity issues; 5) outcome studies; and 6) charges of "pseudoscience." This information can then be used to educate clients and other professionall regarding EMDR.
187. Peterson, G., Smyth, N., Greenwald, R., de Jongh, A., & Lee, C. (2000, October). EMDR for treatment of PTSD. Journal of Clinical Psychiatry, 61(10), 784-785 [Author reply 784-785].
Language: English
Format: Journal
Abstract: Letters question the lack of representation of qualified EMDR clinicians in the Expert Consensus Guideline Series: Treatment of Posttraumatic Stress Disorder. Two letters, one from Peterson and one from the EMDR International Association Research Committee (signed by Smyth, Greenwald, de Jongh, and Lee), commenting on: Foa, Davidson, and Frances, "Treatment of posttraumatic stress disorder (Expert consensus guideline series)," Journal of Clinical Psychiatry 60(Supplement 10) (1999) [14767], with a reply by Foa, Davidson, and Frances. [Pilots]
Keywords: PTSD Professional Criticism Reply Professional Standards Letter Practice Guideline Commentary
188. Ralaus, D. (2006). Slovenský inštitút pre psychotraumatológiu a EMDR (Eye movement desensitization and reprocessing). Psychiatria, 13(Part 3/4), 167-176.
Language: Slovak
Format: Journal
Abstract: No abstract available.
189. Roberson, M. (2004, November). Psychotherapy for trauma: A three part holistic approach. Bountiful Health.
Language: English
Format: Magazine
Abstract: A person’s response to trauma is always both physical and emotional. For many, it is also important to integrate the spiritual aspect into the recovery. Often there are three parts to holistic trauma psychotherapy: (1) stabilization (understanding symptoms in a new way, as well as learning skills to manage emotions and cope with life stresses); (2) processing the trauma itself; and (3) reexamining the spiritual meaning, life direction, and relationships.
Keywords: Theory Practice Holistic Approach
190. Rodriguez, G., Luber, M., Hofmann, A., Marquis, P., Sprowls, C., & Snyker, E. (1998, July). EMDR in the world: Training and practice in different cultures. Paper presented at the annual meeting of the EMDR International Association, Baltimore, MD.
Language: English
Format: Conference
Abstract: Participants will learn to: 1) share different experiences of working in different cultures to help therapists in their work; 2) realize the possibilities of the EMDR method across different languages and cultures; 3) facilitate development training practices that are sensitive to preserve cultural differences.
Keywords: Multi-Cultural Training Practice
191. Rogers, S. (2006, December). Drifting away from EMDR. EMDRIA Newsletter, 11(4), 7-8.
Language: English
Format: Newsletter
Abstract: Those who have attended Francine Shapiro’s Plenary Addresses in recent EMDRIA Conferences are aware of her wish that EMDR clinicians accurately reproduce the EMDR procedure and understand her Adaptive Information Processing model. This concern was sparked by the frequency of phone calls to the EMDR Institute from clients who had been treated with variations of the EMDR protocol with poor results. Also, here in Pennsylvania, we have had several veterans come into our treatment program claiming that they had been treated with EMDR and it didn’t work. When we asked for a description of the treatment, it was clear that the therapist had added elements to the desensitization phase, such as affi rmations, positive imagery, and relaxation techniques.
Keywords: Theory Practice Cautions
192. Roques, J. (2009). L'EMDR - [EMDR]. Paris: InterEditions.
Language: French
Format: Book
Abstract: Initiation à la méthode de traitement des traumatismes psychiques EMDR qui s'appuie sur la désensibilisation par le mouvement des yeux et le retraitement de l'information, en vue de la résolution des symptômes liés à des événements du passé. Présente les origines, les principes et fondements théoriques, les champs d'application, le déroulement d'une séance.
193. Roques, J. (2007). Guérir avec l 'EMDR: Traitement, théorie, témoignages (Broché) - [Healing with EMDR: Treatment, theory, evidence]. Paris: Seuil.
Language: French
Format: Book
Abstract: Oui, on peut guérir définitivement, et dans certains cas très rapidement, d'un problème psychologique grave. Beaucoup de gens ont eu leur vie transformée grâce à cette thérapie inventée en 1987 aux Etats-Unis par Francine Shapiro. L'EMDR n'est pas un effet de mode passager, mais l'expression d'une découverte majeure : notre cerveau est naturellement équipé pour guérir de ses blessures psychiques. Il peut cicatriser. L'EMDR n'est que le moyen qui permet de remettre en route le processus de retraitement de l'information bloquée au jour de l'événement traumatique. Jacques Roques veut éclairer ce mécanisme. Il donne de nombreux exemples de pathologies : traumatismes simples, traumatismes complexes et aussi empoisonnements psychiques, quand le traumatisme, distillé à petite dose comme un venin, ne se révèle qu'au cours de la thérapie. S'appuyant sur la clinique et sur ce qu'on sait aujourd'hui du fonctionnement cérébral, Jacques Roques développe des hypothèses nouvelles permettant de comprendre ces pathologies, ainsi que le fonctionnement de l'EMDR, pour améliorer la prise en charge des malades et leur permettre de recouvrer encore plus vite la santé. Ecrit dans un langage simple, donnant la parole à ses patients aussi bien qu'à ses collègues, Jacques Roques cherche surtout à diffuser un savoir utile. Comment accepter qu'aujourd'hui tant de gens continuent à souffrir alors qu'ils pourraient être définitivement guéris?
194. Roques, J. (2004). EMDR: Une révolution thérapeutique - [EMDR a revolutionary therapy]. Paris: Desclee de Brouwer.
Language: French
Format: Book
Abstract: Voici une découverte thérapeutique qui bouleverse notre compréhension du fonctionnement psychique. Conçu en 1987 aux USA par Francine Shapiro pour guérir les traumatismes psychiques, l'EMDR permet de soigner aussi bien d'autres problématiques névrotiques (phobies, angoisses, états dépressifs, etc.). Cette méthode a été importée en France en 1994. Son efficacité a pu être vérifiée aussitôt en cabinet et en milieu hospitalier. Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing ou EMDR peut se traduire par Désensibilisation et retraitement (de l'information) par les mouvements oculaires. Si le mouvement de l'œil revêt effectivement une grande importance dans la gestion neurologique de la mémoire, il n'en est pas l'unique ressort comme on pourrait le croire. D'autres modes complémentaires de stimulation sensorielle alternée du cerveau, mis en œuvre par un thérapeute expérimenté, peuvent activer pareillement le travail de cicatrisation psychique et de guérison. Ce livre a pour vocation d'éclairer et d'informer, mais aussi d'enseigner. Il est accessible à toute personne désireuse de comprendre la pathologie et son traitement. A vocation didactique, il s'adresse également aux professionnels du soin en raison de sa dimension théorique approfondie et de ses développements cliniques.
195. Rosen, G. M., McNally, R. J., & Lilienfeld, S. O. (1999, September 22). Eye movement magic: Eye movement desensitization and reprocessing a decade later. The Skeptic, 7(4), 66-69.
Language: English
Format: Magazine
Abstract: While strolling through a park one day, Francine Shapiro notices that certain of her troubling thoughts suddenly lost their distressing qualities. Curious about what had happened; Shapiro regenerated the mental images and again found them no longer upsetting. Attending closely to her behavior, she realized that her eyes had been spontaneously and rapidly shifting back and forth. Suspecting that rapid eye movements might possess hitherto untapped therapeutic powers, Shapiro began informal tests on her friends. She asked them to concentrate on a traumatic or disturbing memory and to track her finger visually as she moved it back and forth in front of their eyes. Her friends reported feeling better and their memories were no longer disturbing.
Reprinted in M. Shermer (ed.), The Skeptic Encyclopedia of Pseudoscience,Volume I, Santa Barbara:ABC-CLIO, Inc.
196. Rosenthal, H. 2006. Therapy's best: Practical advice and gems of wisdom from twenty accomplished counselors and therapists. Binghamton, NY, London: Haworth Reference.
Language: English
Format: Book
Abstract: Table of Contents Preface: Lessons from the Legends of the Couch. The Svengali Interviews. Robert Alberti on Assertiveness: Rights and Writes. The Marriage-Counseling Mystique: A Candid Interview with Dorothy and Ray Becvar. Schmoozing with Bob Bertolino: Solution-Oriented Brief Therapy Is Coming to a Treatment Center Near You. Flying High with the World’s Best-Known Job-Hunting Counselor: Richard Nelson Bolles. The Mummy at the Dining Room Table and Beyond: An Insightful Interview with Dr. Jon Carlson. Psychotherapy Is a Strange Field: An In-Depth Chat with a Seasoned Professional, Raymond J. Corsini. The REBT Story You Haven’t Heard: A No-Holds-Barred Interview with Albert Ellis. Voice Therapy: An Interview with Robert and Lisa Firestone. Samuel T. Gladding on Creativity. One-on-One with William Glasser: Counseling with Choice Theory, the New Reality Therapy. Les Greenberg: Emotion Makes a Comeback. The Wisdom of Muriel James. An Interview with Jeffrey Kottler. Taking off the Gloves with Al Mahrer, the Undisputed Welterweight Experiential Therapy Champion of the World. Psychoanalysis Now and Then: A Conversation with Nancy McWilliams. The Gambling Addiction Era Cometh: A Thought-Provoking Interview with Lia Nower. An Encounter with EMDR Pioneer Francine Shapiro: The Eyes Have It. A Psychological Approach to Psychotherapy with Suicidal Patients: An Intellectual Exchange with Edwin S. Shneidman. What We Can Learn from Accomplished Counselors and Therapists: A Baker’s Dozen of Insightful Gems of Wisdom. References.
Keywords: Interview Francine Shapiro Theory Practice
197. Rost, C. (2008). Ressourcenarbeit mit EMDR bewährte techniken im uberblick - [Resources working with EMDR. Proven techniques at a glance: From survival to life]. Paderborn Junfermann.
Language: German
Format: Book
Abstract: In der Traumatherapie wird nicht mehr automatisch nur auf das Schwere fokussiert, sondern ganz bewusst mit den Klientinnen und Klienten nach Ereignissen in ihrem Leben gesucht, die gelungen sind, schön waren, erfolgreich und lustbetont. Diese Buch vermittelt bewährte Techniken zur Ressourcenaktivierung mit EMDR, von denen die Autoren aufgrund ihrer praktischen Arbeit überzeugt sind. Zusätzlich zum EMDR-Standardprotokoll haben sich eine ganze Reihe von Protokollen entwickelt, in denen die bilaterale Stimulation von EMDR mit verschiedenen anderen Techniken kombiniert wird. Das Buch soll einen Überblick über genau die Techniken geben, bei denen sich die Ressourcenaktivierung mit EMDR im klinischen Einsatz bewährt hat und möchte andere Therapeuten ermutigen, die Techniken ebenfalls auszuprobieren und zu erforschen. Mit Beiträgen von: Christine Rost, Franz Ebner, Dagmar Eckers, Reinhard Plassmann, Michael Hase, Susanne Leutner, Mark Novy, Björke Kühn von Burgdorff
198. Rothbaum, B. (1992). How does EMDR work?. the Behavior Therapist, 15, 34 & 46.
Language: English
Format: Journal
Abstract: I have made some interesting observations regarding the mechanisms underlying Francine Shapiro’s Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR (Shapiro, 1989).
199. Rubin, A. (1999, November). Presidential editorial: Controlling for potential biases in research on social work practice effectiveness: Are higher standards needed?. Research on Social Work Practice, 9(6), 635-639.
Language: English
Format: Journal
Abstract: The article offers views on the processes and standards used by professional journals with respect to the review of manuscripts that report evaluations of practice effectiveness. The article discusses rejecting a study that randomly assigned clients to a treatment group and wait-list control group. The article discusses biases in research on social work practice effectiveness. Although the obvious bias in these studies regarding expectation for improvement or experimental demand was roundly criticized in subsequent reviews, it didn't keep them from being published. Given the difficulties researchers face in finding agencies that will permit rigorous experimental outcome studies, it is easy to recommend publishing a study that is strong in virtually every way but one-even if that one weakness is so severe that it virtually destroys the credibility of the study's findings. The author believes in studies using randomized assignment to experimental and control groups, where readers are so impressed by the randomized experimental design that they cut the author some slack regarding possible measurement bias or the potentially biasing effects of expectation for improvement or experimental demand.[EbscoHost]
Keywords: Editorial
200. Rubin, A. & Springer, D. W. (2009). Treatment of traumatized adults and children: Clinician's guide to evidence-based practice. (Eds.) Hoboken: New Jersey .
Language: English
Format: Book
201. Sack, M. (Date of Publication Unknown). Aktuelle befunde zu wirkfaktoren der EMDR-behandlung - Recent findings on effective factors of EMDR treatment]. Unknown..
Language: German
Format: Other
Abstract: Das EMDR-Behandlungsverfahren (EMDR= eye movement desensitization and reprocessing) wurde von der amerikanischen Psychologin Francine Shapiro entwickelt und seit 1989 als manualisiertes Therapieverfahren zur Behandlung von Patienten mit Posttraumatischen Belastungsstörungen (PTSD) und anderen traumabezogenen Symptomen eingesetzt. Die Grundvorgehensweise besteht darin, dass der Patient in der Sicherheit einer haltgebenden therapeutischen Beziehung eine Konfrontation mit seinen traumatischen Erinnerungen erlebt. Ziel der Traumabearbeitung ist die Integration von kognitiven, emotionalen und körperlichen Reaktionen auf das Trauma indem die Erinnerungen wiederbelebt, wahrgenommen und verarbeitet werden. Anders formuliert, wird die durch das Trauma induzierte Dissoziation wieder aufgehoben. Die in der traumatischen Situation unterbrochene Verbindung zwischen Wahrnehmungen, Gedanken, Emotionen und Körperreaktionen wird wieder hergestellt. Danach erfolgt eine Bearbeitung von dysfunktionalen Kognitionen, wie z.B. von Schuldgefühlen, die auf unrealistischen Einschätzungen der traumatischen Situation beruhen (Shapiro 1998). Abweichend von der klassischen verhaltenstherapeutischen Traumaexposition werden im EMDR die Traumaexpositionsphasen nur relativ kurz (30 – 90 sec) durchgeführt und durch bilaterale Stimulierung in Form von Augenbewegungen (der Hand des Therapeuten mit den Augen folgen) oder durch alternative Berührungsreize auf die linke und rechte Hand (sog. Tapping) oder durch alternativ dargebotene Töne ausgelöst.
202. Salkovskis, P. (2002, February). Eye movement desensitization and reprocessing is not better than exposure therapies for anxiety of trauma. Evidence-based Mental Health, 5(1), 13.
Language: English
Format: Journal
Abstract: Comment on Journal of Clinical Psychology, 2001, Apr, 69(2), 305-316. QUESTION: Is eye movement desensitisation and reprocessing (EMDR) effective for trauma or anxiety? Do the presence of eye movements, therapist training, or disorder influence effectiveness?
Keywords: Theory Practice Treatment Effectiveness
203. Scarf, M. (2004). Secrets, lies, betrayals: How the body holds secrets of a life and how to unlock them. New York: Random House.
Language: English
Format: Book
Abstract: Bestselling author Scarf (Intimate Partners; Unfinished Business) explores new therapies that claim to be able to "reprocess" or "detoxify" traumatic memories through physical manipulation of the nervous system. Via accessibly presented neuroscience, Scarf explains how the body stores memories of intensely stressful experiences. A writer rather than a clinician (she's a senior fellow at Yale's Bush Center in Child Development and Social Policy), Scarf generates her data through meeting women subjects in marital distress and exploring their pasts through gentle discussion. Throughout, Scarf weaves her own autobiographical reflections, centered on painful memories of an autocratic father and a negligent mother. Seeking to advance her own emotional well-being, she enters into a reprocessing therapy session and becomes an advocate of the technique; she persuades one of her subjects to try it out, with apparently successful results. Although the physical ailments presented in Scarf's account seem extremely slight, she makes much of a sense of emotional breakthrough and release. Scarf's investigation into the methodology of reprocessing therapies is scientifically limited, yet she does allow us some insights into how they function. Admirers of her work will enjoy her ability to evoke relationship dynamics (including abusive relationships), her seductively flowing style and her emphasis on perceptive readings of life histories. Readers with a serious interest in psychology will find little cutting-edge scholarship here, and some may question why all Scarf's subjects are women. Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
204. Scharwachter, P. (2001). De behandeling van een vrouw met meermalige traumatisering in één zitting met emdr Behandeling meermalige traumatisering - [The treatment of a woman with multiple trauma with EMDR treatment session in a multiple trauma]. DTH - Kwartaalschrift voor Directieve Therapie en Hypnose, 21(3), 210-218.
Language: Dutch
Format: Journal
Abstract: No abstract available.
205. Scheiner, Z. (2002). When to seek EMDR treatment. EMDRNews.com.
Language: English
Format: Other
Abstract: You've experienced a loss - your parent died, your child died, your spouse died. You went through the funeral and the official mourning period. You've had family members and fiiends by your side. The casseroles appeared every morning; the invitations to chat came regularly. Everyone encouraged you to feel your feelings, to be sad, to be angry, to be whatever you happened to be.
206. Schlesinger, M. (2002, November). Benefits and hazards of introducing EMDR in later stages of therapy. International Society for the Study of Dissociation Fall Conference, Baltimore, MD.
Language: English
Format: Conference
207. Schore, A. (2000, September). The neurobiology of attachment and the origin of self: Implications for theory and clinical practice. Paper presented at the annual meeting of the EMDR International Association, Toronto, Ontario Canada.
Language: English
Format: Conference
Abstract: The participant will: 1) learn how the attachment relationship acts to regulate the child's emotional state; 2) learn how these interactions influence the experience-dependent maturation of the infant's right hemisphere; and 3) learn the structure-function relationships of a regulatory system in the orbital prefrontal areas of the cortext.
Keywords: Neurobiology
208. Segal, Z. V. (1994). Taking a closer look at EMDR. the Behavior Therapist, 17(7), 153.
Language: English
Format: Journal
Abstract: In what may be the first study of its kind, researchers are trying to determine whether therapy that incorporates an unusual trauma treatment helps victims of domestic violence.
209. Servan-Schreiber, D. (2006, September). Nature’s way of self-healing – From neuroscience to clinical practice. Plenary at the annual meeting of the EMDR International Association, Philadelphia, PA.
Language: English
Format: Conference
Abstract: Progress in neuroscience and recent clinical studies are shedding light on how mind and body affect each other. The central mechanism of healing is homeostatisis: the body's ability to return to balance when provided with basic biological needs. This talk will review mind-body interactions in relation to emotional healing and how they translate into specific treatment interventions.
Keywords: Plenary
210. Servan-Schreiber, D. (2005, June). Nature’s way of self-healing: From neuroscience to clinical practice. Paper presented at the annual meeting of the EMDR Europe Association, Brussels, Belgium.
Language: English
Format: Conference
Abstract: EMDR stimulates the body to heal the mind. Progress in neuroscience and recent clinical studies are shedding light on how mind and body affect each other. The central mechanism of healing is homeostasis: the body's ability to return to balance when provided with basic biological needs. This talk will review mind-body interactions in relation to emotional healing and how they translate into treatment interventions.
Keywords: Plenary Homeostasis Neuroscience Practice
211. Shapiro, F. (2009, June). EMDR: Theory, research and practice. Keynote presented at the annual meeting of the EMDR Europe Association, Amsterdam, the Netherlands .
Language: English
Format: Conference
Keywords: Theory Research Practice Keynote
212. Shapiro, F. (2003). EMDR als integrativer psychotherapeutischer ansatz: Experten verschiedenster psychotherapeutischer orientierung erforschen das paradigmenprisma - [EMDR as an integrative psychotherapy approach: Experts of diverse orientations explore the paradigm prism]. Paderborn: Junfermannsche.
Language: German
Format: Book
Abstract: Im vorliegenden Buch beschäftigen sich führende Vertreter der wichtigsten aktuellen psychotherapeutischen Schulen damit, wie EMDR, eine ursprünglich zur Behandlung von PTBS entwickelten Methode, sich mit ihren jeweiligen eigenen Ansätzen verbinden läßt. Die Autoren der einzelnen Beiträge geben Anwendungshinweise und beschreiben anschaulich Techniken für die Behandlung zahlreicher Probleme und Störungen, darunter Depression, Bindungsstörung, soziale Phobie, generalisierte Angststörung, Störung des Körperbildes, Eheprobleme und Existenzangst. Aus der Vielfalt der Sichtweisen schält sich ein Bild der Ähnlichkeiten zwischen den verschiedenen Disziplinen heraus: Es werden Möglichkeiten einer wirksameren Behandlung aufgezeigt, und die durch EMDR eröffneten Möglichkeiten einer integrativen Behandlungsweise werden erkennbar. Mit Beiträgen von: Francine Shapiro, Bessel A. van der Kolk, Paul L. Wachtel, Arnold A. Lazarus, Stephen Gilligan, John Norcross, u.a. Ein ausführlicheres Bild von diesem Buch können sich die Leser durch die Leseproben auf der Verlags-Website machen.
213. Shapiro, F. (1998). Eye movement desensitization and reprocessing (EMDR). Audio Digest Psychiatry, 27(7).
Language: English
Format: Audio
Abstract: Origin of EMDR: "I noticed that some disturbing thoughts I was having were suddenly disappearing, and when I went to bring them back, they just didn't have the same charge anymore, they just weren't as emotionally loaded; ..I notic& that when that kind of thought came to mind, my eyes started moving spontaneously in a certain way, a very rapid ballistic movement, and I noticed the thought shift out of consciousness, and then when I brought it back again. it no longer had that same charge; . . . I wanted to see whether it would work if I did it deliberately, so I brought up something that bothered me, something minor, and I moved my eyes in the same way, and I found the same thing happen; the thought shifted, and then on retrieval it wasn't as valid. it didn't have the same emotional load; .. . I wanted to see if it would work for anyone else"
Keywords: Lecture Theory Practice
214. Shapiro, F. (1998). Foreword. In P. Manfield (Ed.), Extending EMDR: A casebook of innovative applications (1st ed.) (pp. iii-vi). New York: W. W. Norton.
Language: English
Format: Book Section
Abstract: No abstract available.
215. Shapiro, F. (2002, December). EMDR and the role of the clinician in psychotherapy evaluation: Towards a more comprehensive integration of science and practice. Journal of Clinical Psychology, 58(12), 1453-1463.
Language: English
Format: Journal
Abstract: 10.1002/jclp.10104
Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR) is an integrative psychotherapy approach that has been consistently evaluated as efficacious in the treatment of PTSD. The information processing model that guides its clinical application posits that EMDR should be effective in treating other psychological disorders that have experiential contributors. Research is needed to assess such applications. This special issue features three case series in which EMDR was applied to the treatment of complex PTSD, phobias, and chronic pain, respectively. The authors discuss deficits in the research literature, provide preliminary data on EMDR treatment of these conditions, and offer descriptive guidelines for evaluation that are achievable by the practicing clinician. Two additional articles offer preliminary data on physiological and cognitive/affective concomitants of therapeutic change. It is argued that clinicians should play a greater role in the rigorous and extensive examination of psychological treatments in the context of the exigencies of clinical practice. [Author Abstract]
Keywords: Complex PTSD Assessment Treatment Effectiveness EVT Integration PTSD Phobia Pain
216. Shapiro, F. (2009, January). EMDR: Theory, research, and practice. Keynote at the annual meeting of the EMDR Europe Association, Amsterdam.
Language: English
Format: Conference
Keywords: Keynote
217. Shapiro, F. (2001). Foreword. In S. Silver & S. Rogers Light in the heart of darkness (pp. ix-xi). Chicago: W. W. Norton.
Language: English
Format: Book Section
Abstract: No abstract available.
218. Shapiro, F. (1991). History and overview. International Society for Traumatic Stress Studies Fall Conference, Washington, DC.
Language: English
Format: Conference
Keywords: History Overview Theory Practice
219. Shapiro, F. (2002, January). EMDR overview: Theory, research, and areas of controversy. Journal of clinical psychology, 58(1).
Language: English
Format: Journal
Abstract: "Special issue" Journal of clinical psychology. -- Vol. 58, no. 1 (Jan. 2002)
Keywords: Overview Theory Practice Research
220. Shapiro, F. (2009). Desensibilizacion y reprocesamiento por medio de movimiento ocular (EMDR). Pax Mexico L.C.C.S.A.
Language: Spanish
Format: Book
Abstract: En tan solo unos cuantos años, el modo EMDR se ha convertido en el tratamiento más elaborado para el desorden de estrés postraumático (entre otras perturbaciones). El método EMDR es un tratamiento legítimo y poderoso.
Modelo integral y eficiente en el tratamiento de experiencias perturbadoras, el método EMDR incorpora diversos aspectos de terapias sistémicas, psicodinámicas, experienciales, conductuales y corporales. Consiste en ocho fases que comprenden el uso de movimientos oculares y otras formas de estimulación izquierda-derecha.
Es eficaz para tratar el desorden de estrés postraumático y reprocesar pensamientos y recuerdos perturbadores o problemas psicológicos de sobrevivientes de traumas, de abuso sexual, de crímenes, de combate bélico, así como de fobias y desórdenes causados por experiencias vivenciales y proporciona en poco tiempo efectos clínicos profundos y estables.
Con descripciones y transcripciones detalladas, la autora guía al clínico por cada etapa del tratamiento terapéutico, desde la selección de los clientes hasta la aplicación del método y su integración dentro de un plan integral de tratamiento clínico.
Escrito de manera accesible, este libro es una guía invaluable tanto para los clínicos experimentados en el tratamiento EMDR como para las personas que acaban de conocer el método, y para los estudiantes avanzados de psicología clínica y psicoterapia.
In just a few years, modeEMDR has become more elaborate treatment for PTSD (among other disturbances) clutter. The methodEMDR is a legitimate and powerful treatment.
Comprehensive and efficient model in the treatment of disturbing experiences, the methodEMDR incorporates aspects of systemic therapies, psychodynamic, experienciales, behavioural and body. Consists of eight phases comprising the use of eye movements and other forms of left-right stimulation.
It is effective in treating post-traumatic stress disorder and re-processing thoughts and disturbing memories or psychological problems of survivors of trauma, sexual abuse, of crimes, war combat, as well as phobias and disorders caused by vivenciales experiences and provides deep and stable clinical effects in a short time.
With descriptions and detailed transcripts, the author guides the clinical through every stage of therapeutic, treatment from clients to the implementation of the method and their integration within a comprehensive clinical treatment plan selection.
Written in an accessible manner, this book is an invaluable guide for clinicians in the treatmentEMDR as for people just know the method and for advanced students of clinical psychology and psychotherapy.
221. Shapiro, F. (2009, December). Conversation Hour. Evolution of Psychotherapy Conference, Anaheim, CA.
Language: English
Format: Conference
222. Shapiro, F. (1998, October). EMDR as accelerated information processing therapy: Research and Practice. The California Psychologist, 31(10), 25-27.
Language: English
Format: Journal
Abstract: An exchange of views on the efficacy of eye movement desensitization and reprocessing. [Pilots] ...The California Psychologist, October 1998 POINT/COUNTERPINT Feature: Point: Shapiro, F. (1998, October). EMDR as accelerated information processing therapy: Research and Practice. The California Psychologist, 31(10), 25-27. Counterpoint: Rosen, G. M., McNally, R. J., Lohr, J. M., Devilly, G. J., Herbert, J. D., & Lilienfeld, S. O. (1998, October). A realistic appraisal of EMDR. The California Psychologist, 31(10), 25, 27.... [Reprinted in: Oregon Psychological Association's Newsgram, 1998, 17, 10-13; Washington Psychologist, 1998, 52, 9-10; Virginia Psychologist, 1999, 42, 11; Massachusetts Psychological Association's Quarterly, 1999, 42, 10-11; Georgia Psychologist, 1999, 53, 25; Missouri Psychologist, 1999, 11 (2), 7-8; Arkansas Psychologist, 1999, 1, 9-10; New York State Psychological Association Notebook, 1999, 11(3),19]
Keywords: PTSD Stressors Survivors Treatment Effectiveness Commentary
223. Shapiro, F. (2006, September). EMDR update: Theory, research, and practice. Plenary paper presented at the annual meeting of the EMDR International Association, Philadelphia, PA.
Language: English
Format: Conference
Abstract: As an integrative psychotherapy approach, EMDR brings together aspects of major psychotherapy orientations. Dr. Shapiro will review several cases with special attention to synthesiszing recommendations from these various models along with the latest EMDR research and clinical developments. The Adaptive Information Processing Model and research on underlying mechanisms will be used as a springboard to explore clinical applications, procedural modifications, and clinical limitations. Questions from conference participants will be taken in advance to address aspects of the model and methodology.
Keywords: Update
224. Shapiro, F. (1992, Summer). Eye movement desensitization and reprocessing (EMDR) in 1992. ASCH News Letter, 32(2), 7-8.
Language: English
Format: Newsletter
225. Shapiro, F. (2007). Manuel d’EMDR – Principles, protocols, procédures -[Handbook of EMDR: Principles, protocols, procedures]. Paris, France: Dunod-InterEditions.
Language: French
Format: Book
Abstract: En complément d'information, consulter la fiche Psychothérapie. Vous y trouverez une vue d'ensemble des multiples approches psychothérapeutiques – incluant un tableau guide pour vous aider à choisir les plus appropriées – ainsi qu'un exposé sur les facteurs de réussite d’une thérapie.
226. Shapiro, F. (2006). New notes on adaptive information processing. Hamden, CT: EMDR Humanitarian Assistance Programs.
Language: English
Format: Other
227. Shapiro, F. (2007, September). EMDR update: Theory, research, and practice. Keynote presented at the EMDR International Association annual conference, Dallas, TX.
Language: English
Format: Conference
Abstract: New research continues to shed light on EMDR as a distinct psychotherapy approach. Dr. Shapiro will review several new studies and their implications for both theory and future clinical development. The Adaptive Information Processing model and research on underlying mechanisms will be used as a springboard to explore potential applications and ways to overcome a variety of clinical difficulties. Specific clinical cases will be used to illustrate the integration of EMDR with other orientations. Questions from conference participants will be taken in advance to address aspects of the model and methodology.
Keywords: Keynote Research, Adaptive Processing Model, AIP
228. Shapiro, F. (2008). EMDR: Desensibilización y reprocesamiento por medio de movimiento ocular. Santa Cruz Atoyac: Pax Mex Editorial.
Language: Spanish
Format: Book
Abstract: En tan solo unos cuantos años, el modo EMDR se ha convertido en el tratamiento más elaborado para el desorden de estrés postraumático (entre otras perturbaciones). El método EMDR es un tratamiento legítimo y poderoso.
Modelo integral y eficiente en el tratamiento de experiencias perturbadoras, el método EMDR incorpora diversos aspectos de terapias sistémicas, psicodinámicas, experienciales, conductuales y corporales. Consiste en ocho fases que comprenden el uso de movimientos oculares y otras formas de estimulación izquierda-derecha.
Es eficaz para tratar el desorden de estrés postraumático y reprocesar pensamientos y recuerdos perturbadores o problemas psicológicos de sobrevivientes de traumas, de abuso sexual, de crímenes, de combate bélico, así como de fobias y desórdenes causados por experiencias vivenciales y proporciona en poco tiempo efectos clínicos profundos y estables.
Con descripciones y transcripciones detalladas, la autora guía al clínico por cada etapa del tratamiento terapéutico, desde la selección de los clientes hasta la aplicación del método y su integración dentro de un plan integral de tratamiento clínico.
Escrito de manera accesible, este libro es una guía invaluable tanto para los clínicos experimentados en el tratamiento EMDR como para las personas que acaban de conocer el método, y para los estudiantes avanzados de psicología clínica y psicoterapia.
In just a few years, mode EMDR has become more elaborate treatment for PTSD (among other disturbances) clutter. The methodEMDR is a legitimate and powerful treatment.
Comprehensive and efficient model in the treatment of disturbing experiences, the methodEMDR incorporates aspects of systemic therapies, psychodynamic, experienciales, behavioural and body. Consists of eight phases comprising the use of eye movements and other forms of left-right stimulation.
It is effective in treating post-traumatic stress disorder and re-processing thoughts and disturbing memories or psychological problems of survivors of trauma, sexual abuse, of crimes, war combat, as well as phobias and disorders caused by vivenciales experiences and provides deep and stable clinical effects in a short time.
With descriptions and detailed transcripts, the author guides the clinical through every stage of therapeutic, treatment from clients to the implementation of the method and their integration within a comprehensive clinical treatment plan selection.
Written in an accessible manner, this book is an invaluable guide for clinicians in the treatmentEMDR as for people just know the method and for advanced students of clinical psychology and psychotherapy.
229. Shapiro, F. (1992). Eye movement desensitization and reprocessing: Three day workshop Australia. Pacific Grove, CA: EMDR Institute, Inc.
Language: English
Format: Other
230. Shapiro, F. & Forrest, M. S. (2008). EMDR: Una terapia revolucionaria para superar la ansiedad, el estrés y los traumas - [EMDR: The breakthrough therapy for overcoming anxiety, stress and trauma]. Barcelona: Kairós.
Language: Spanish
Format: Book
Abstract: Accessible and well documented, this examination provides an introduction to the groundbreaking method of eye-movement desensitization and reprocessing (EMDR)—a short-term therapy for treating trauma victims that utilizes rhythmical stimulation such as eye movement or hand taps—and describes its application in various cases. Several case studies from some of the nearly two million patients who have been treated with EMDR are provided to demonstrate the effectiveness of this revolutionary technique. Accesible y bien documentado, este examen provee una introducción al método innovador de terapia de desensibilización y reprocesamiento a través de los movimientos oculares (EMDR, según su sigla en inglés)—una terapia de corto plazo para tratar a víctimas de traumas que utiliza estimulación rítmica como el movimiento de ojos o palmaditas de mano—y describe sus diferentes aplicaciones. Se provee una serie de testimonios de algunos de los casi dos millones de pacientes tratados con EMDR para demostrar la eficacia de esta revolucionaria técnica.
231. Shapiro, F., Levin, C., Dunton, R., & Goldstein, A. (1992, July). Eye movement desensitization and reprocessing procedure: A rapid treatement for anxiety and related trauma. Paper presented at the Fourth World Congress on Behaviour Therapy, Queesland, Australia.
Language: English
Format: Conference
Abstract: The Eye Movement Desensitisation and Reprocessing (EMDR) procedure has been used on thousands of victims (ages 3-74) f traumatic memories, including, combat, rape/molestation, and sexual cult abuse.
232. Shapiro, F., & Forrest, M. (2002). EMDR in aktion - Die neue kurzeittherapie in der praxis - [EMDR: The breakthrough therapy for overcoming anxiety, stress and trauma]. Paderborn, Germany, Junfermann Verlag GmbH & Co.
Language: German
Format: Book
Abstract: Shapiro , Francine EMDR - Grundlagen und Praxis Handbuch zur Behandlung traumatisierter Menschen Originaltitel: Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing 2. Auflage, 2005.02.09 488 Seiten, Kartoniert Format: 17.0 x 24.0cm ISBN: 3-87387-360-5 ISBN 13: 978-3-87387-360-5 44,50 EUR EMDR (Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing) ist eine von Francine Shapiro entwickelte innovative klinische Behandlungsmethode für Trauma-Opfer. Aufgrund äußerst positiver neuer Untersuchungsergebnisse ist EMDR mittlerweile die am gründlichsten untersuchte Methode zur Behandlung der Posttraumatischen Belastungsstörung (PTBS). Gleichzeitig werden Untersuchungen über die Möglichkeiten der Anwendung von EMDR bei anderen Störungen durchgeführt. EMDR ist eine zeitsparende, umfassende Methode zur Behandlung traumatischer Erfahrungen, die die Ursache vieler Pathologien sind. Als integratives Therapiemodell, das verhaltenspsychologische, kognitive, psychodynamische, körperorientierte und systemische Elemente umfaßt, ermöglicht EMDR, in relativ kurzer Zeit tiefreichende und stabile Resultate zu erzielen. Die EMDR-Behandlungssequenz, die acht Phasen umfaßt und Augenbewegungen sowie andere Methoden der Rechts-Links-Stimulation nutzt, hilft Trauma-Opfern bei der Aufarbeitung beunruhigender Gedanken und Erinnerungen. Dieses umfassende Basiswerk zum Thema EMDR gibt einen Überblick über die Entwicklung und Erforschung der neuen Methode. Zu den vielen Patientengruppen, bei denen mit EMDR gearbeitet werden kann, zählen die Opfer von sexuellem Mißbrauch, von Verbrechen, kämpferischen Auseinandersetzungen, Kriegsfolgen und Phobie-Patienten. Als Einführung in eine neue wichtige Methode im Bereich der Traumabehandlung ist dieses Buch eine unverzichbare Lektüre für alle Kliniker und Forscher, die sich für die Arbeit mit Trauma-Opfern interessieren. Das Lehrbuch zu EMDR, dieser neuen, so überaus erfolgreichen Therapiemethode zur Behandlung von Traumaopfern.
233. Shapiro, F., & Forrest, M. S.. (2005). EMDR: Vernieuwende therapie tegen angst, stress en trauma - [EMDR: The breakthrough therapy for overcoming anxiety, stress and trauma]. Antwerpen; Apeldoorn: Garant. 287 pp..
Language: Dutch
Format: Book
Abstract: EMDR staat voor "Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing" en is een kortdurende, geprotocolleerde en cliëntgerichte behandelmethode om schokkende ervaringen te verwerken. Ook kan het helpen tegen angst en stress. EMDR integreert verschillende succesvolle elementen van andere therapieën in combinatie met een afleidende stimulus. Deze stimulus kan zijn: het met de ogen volgen van de handen van de therapeut, bi-laterale audiostimulatie, of bi-laterale handstimulatie. Hierdoor wordt "het informatie-verwerkings-systeem in de hersenen" gestimuleerd. Met EMDR is het niet nodig om jarenlang te praten over het verleden. Wel worden, door het stimuleren van het informatie-verwerkings-systeem, in een relatief korte tijd therapeutische doelen bereikt. Hierbij veroorzaakt EMDR herkenbare veranderingen die ook na langere tijd blijven bestaan. De volgende gebeurtenissen kunnen, bij kinderen en volwassenen, leiden tot verwerkingsproblematiek: een (auto)ongeval, brand, diagnose van een ernstige ziekte, getuige van geweld, mishandeling, misbruik, natuurramp, overval, verkrachting of aanranding, verlies van een baan, ziekte of een ziekenhuisbezoek/opname etc. De volgende soorten klachten kunnen kinderen en volwassenen hebben na een schokkende ervaring: herbelevingen van de ervaring, vermijdingsgedrag m.b.t. de ervaring, verhoogde arousal (opgewonden, overdreven alertheid), stress, schaamte of schuldgevoel, slecht humeur, depressie, zich zorgen maken, angsten, slecht zelfbeeld, paniek, slaapproblemen, relatieproblemen, onverklaarbare lichamelijke klachten etc. Voor meer informatie verwijs ik naar www.emdr.nl.
234. Shapiro, F., & Maxfield, L. (2002). Eye movement desensitization and reprocessing (EMDR). In M. Hersen & W. Sledge (Eds.), Encyclopedia of psychotherapy, vol. 1 (pp. 777-785). New York: Elsevier Science.
Language: English
Format: Book Section
Abstract: EMDR is an eight-phase treatment approach that brings together aspects of all the major psychological orientations. It has been validated by controlled research to be both effective and efficient in the treatment of post-traumatic stress disorder.
235. Shapiro, F., & Sherwel, C. (2004). EMDR (Eye movement desensitization and reprocessing): Desensibilizacion y reprocesamiento por medio de moimiento ocular. México: Pax México.
Language: Spanish
Format: Book
Abstract: En tan solo unos cuantos años, el modo EMDR se ha convertido en el tratamiento más elaborado para el desorden de estrés postraumático (entre otras perturbaciones). El método EMDR es un tratamiento legítimo y poderoso. Modelo integral y eficiente en el tratamiento de experiencias perturbadoras, el método EMDR incorpora diversos aspectos de terapias sistémicas, psicodinámicas, experienciales, conductuales y corporales. Consiste en ocho fases que comprenden el uso de movimientos oculares y otras formas de estimulación izquierda-derecha. Es eficaz para tratar el desorden de estrés postraumático y reprocesar pensamientos y recuerdos perturbadores o problemas psicológicos de sobrevivientes de traumas, de abuso sexual, de crímenes, de combate bélico, así como de fobias y desórdenes causados por experiencias vivenciales y proporciona en poco tiempo efectos clínicos profundos y estables. Con descripciones y transcripciones detalladas, la autora guía al clínico por cada etapa del tratamiento terapéutico, desde la selección de los clientes hasta la aplicación del método y su integración dentro de un plan integral de tratamiento clínico. Escrito de manera accesible, este libro es una guía invaluable tanto para los clínicos experimentados en el tratamiento EMDR como para las personas que acaban de conocer el método, y para los estudiantes avanzados de psicología clínica y psicoterapia.
236. Shapiro, F., Kaslow, F. W., & Maxfield, L. (2007). Handbook of EMDR and family therapy processes. New York: John Wiley & Sons Inc. xxxiii, 470 pp.
Language: English
Format: Book
Abstract: Starting with the Foreword by Daniel Siegel, MD, the Handbook demonstrates in superb detail how you can combine EMDR’s information processing approach with family systems perspectives and therapy techniques. An impressive and needed piece of work, Handbook of EMDR and Family Therapy Processes provides a clear and comprehensive bridge between individual and family therapies.
Keywords: Family Therapy Processes Theory Practice
237. Shapiro, R. (2005). Introduction. In R. Shapiro (Ed.), EMDR solutions: Pathways to healing (pp. 1-7). New York: W. W. Norton.
Language: English
Format: Book Section
Abstract: No abstract available.
238. Sharp, I. R. (2003, August). The role of critical thinking skills in practicing psychologists' theoretical orientation and choice of intervention techniques. Drexel University.
Language: English
Format: Dissertation/Thesis
Abstract: Over the past two decades, professional psychology has witnessed a growing movement towards the utilization of psychotherapies that have empirical support. Despite this development, therapies that have not been empirically supported continue to experience widespread use. Concurrently, a collection of novel interventions, known as Power/Energy therapies (P/ET’s), has emerged. Although these therapies are based on questionable theoretical foundations and enjoy little or no empirical support, their popularity with clinicians appears to be strong and growing. There is scant research examining individual differences with respect to the practice habits of professional psychologists. The present study examined whether critical thinking skills are a factor in psychologists’ choice of therapeutic interventions, including their use of P/ET’s. As hypothesized, participants who reported using a number of techniques from Power and Energy therapies scored significantly lower on a measure of critical thinking skills. Also as hypothesized, individuals who reported using a number of cognitive-behavioral techniques scored significantly higher on the measure of critical thinking skills. Implications and suggestions for future research are discussed.
239. Sheehan, V. (Publication Date Unknown ). EMDR: A therapy for the future. Valerie Sheehan, LICSW.
Language: English
Format: Other
Abstract: EMDR (Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing) is a powerful and relatively new form of psychotherapy that is challenging everything we believe or have assumed about emotions and the nature of change. Where once it was accepted that psychotherapy often took years, depending on the nature of the problem (and even then outcomes were less than wonderful), therapists and clients are finding that problems that were once resistant to years of psychotherapy are being resolved in a relatively short period of time; sometimes, within a few sessions.
240. Sherman, C. (2004, June). Psychotherapy may offer more benefits for PTSD. Clinical Psychiatry News, 32(6), 20.
Language: English
Format: Journal
Abstract: NEW YORK — In what was described as the first direct comparison of biologic and psychosocial treatment of posttraumatic stress disorder, both modalities were effective in this patient population. [Elsevier]
241. Shusta-Hochberg, S. R. (2003). Impact of the World Trade Center disaster on a Manhattan psychotherapy practice. Journal of Trauma Practice, 2(1), 1-16.
Language: English
Format: Journal
Abstract: On September 11, 2001, when two hijacked planes destroyed the World Trade Center, the world changed. As a clinical psychologist practicing in Manhattan, and specializing in trauma, the author has found the event's impact upon her work to be profound. For most of her patients, in particular the severely dissociative, this event triggered the deepest feelings of vulnerability, fear and rage. She describes the varied trauma responses of her patients, effective interventions, and her own experiences as a psychologist and a New Yorker both on and since September 11. [Author Abstract]
Keywords: Terrorism September 11 Terrorist Attacks (2001) Survivors Personal Narrative Psychologists Americans Dissociative Identity Disorder PTSD
242. Singer, J., & Lalich, J. (1996). Crazy therapies: What are they? Do they work?. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass. pp. 263.
Language: English
Format: Book
Abstract: The relationship between patient and therapist is unique in important ways when compared to relationships between clients and other professionals such as physicians, dentists, attorneys, and accountants. The key difference is present from first contact: it is not clearly understood exactly what will transpire. There is no other professional relationship in which consumers are more in the dark than when they first go to see a therapist. In other fields, the public is fairly well informed about what the professional does. Tradition, the media, and general experience have provided consumers with a baseline by which to judge what transpires. If you break your arm, the orthopedist explains she will take an X ray and set the bone; she tells you something about how long the healing will take if all goes well and gives you an estimate of the cost. When you go to a dentist, you expect him to look at your teeth, take a history, explain what was noted, and recommend a course of treatment with an estimate of time and cost. Your accountant will focus on bookkeeping, tax reports, and finances, and help you deal with regulatory agencies. Consumers enter these relationships expecting that the training, expertise, and ethical obligations of the professional will keep the client's best interests foremost. Both the consumer and the professional are aware of each person's role, and it is generally expected that the professional will stick to doing what he or she is trained to do. The consumer does not expect his accountant to lure him into accepting a new cosmology of how the world works or to "channel" financial information from "entities" who lived thousands of years ago; or for his dentist to induce him to believe that the status of his teeth was affected by an extraterrestrial experimenting on him. Nor does the patient expect the orthopedist to lead him to think the reason he fell and broke his arm was because he was under the influence of a secret satanic cult. But seeing a therapist is a far different situation for the consumer. In the field of psychotherapy there is no relatively agreed upon body of knowledge, no standard procedures that a client can expect. There are no national regulatory bodies, and not every state has governing boards or licensing agencies. There are many types and levels of practitioners. Often the client knows little or nothing at all about what type of therapy a particular therapist "believes in" or what the therapist is really going to be doing in the relationship with the client. In meeting a therapist for the first time, most consumers are almost as blind as a bat about what will transpire between the two of them. At most, they might think they will probably talk to the therapist and perhaps get some feedback or suggestions for treatment. What clients might not be aware of is the gamut of training, the idiosyncratic notions, and the odd practices that they may be exposed to by certain practitioners. Consumers are a vulnerable and trusting lot. And because of the special, unpredictable nature of the therapeutic relationship, it is easy for them to be taken advantage of. This makes it all the more incumbent on therapists to be especially ethical and aware of the power their role carries in our society. The misuse and abuse of power is one of the central factors in what goes wrong. Questions to Ask Your Prospective Therapist Ultimately, a therapist is a service provider who sells a service. A prospective client should feel free to ask enough questions to be able to make an informed decision about whether to hire a particular therapist. We have provided a general list of questions to ask a prospective therapist, but feel free to ask whatever you need to know in order to make a proper evaluation. Consider interviewing several therapists before settling on one, just as you might in purchasing any product. Draw up your list of questions before phoning or going in for your first appointment. We recommend that you ask these questions in a phone interview first, so that you can weed out unlikely candidates and save yourself the time and expense of initial visits that don't go anywhere. If during the process a therapist continues to ask you, "Why do you ask?" or acts as though your questioning reflects some defect in you, think carefully before signing up. Those types of responses will tell you a lot about the entire attitude this person will express toward you - that is, that you are one down and he is one up, and that furthermore you are quaint to even ask the "great one" to explain himself. If you are treated with disdain for asking about what you are buying, think ahead: how could this person lead you to feel better, plan better, or have more self-esteem if he begins by putting you down for being an alert consumer? Remember, you may be feeling bad and even desperate, but there are thousands of mental health professionals, so if this one is not right, keep on phoning and searching.
243. Smith, S. F. (2000). EMDR - En kontroversiel behandling - [EMDR - A controversial treatment]. Psykolog Nyt, 14.
Language: English
Format: Journal
Abstract: BAGGRUND Den 30.09.1994 fløj jeg til Amsterdam. Formålet med rejsen var at deltage i en workshop, hvor jeg skulle lære en ny behandlingsmetode til brug for klienter, der lider af Post Traumatisk Stress Syndrom (PTSD). Min interesse for dette klientel var vakt, da jeg i 1993 var blevet tilknyttet Falcks Redningskorps Psykolognetværk. Samme år deltog jeg i et seminar som Falck arrangerede. Underviseren var den karismatiske norske psykolog, Atle Dyregrov (AD). Han omtalte den amerikanske psykolog, Francine Shapiro (FS), og den særlige behandling hun havde udviklet og som hun benævnte EMDR (Eye Movement Desensitiazion and Reprocessing). AD redegjorde for, at man endnu savnede fuldgyldig videnskabelig dokumentation for behandlingens effektivitet, men at der allerede forelå så mange indikationer på behandlingens effekt, at man kunne regne med, at det kun var et spørgsmål om tid, før en sikker dokumentation var i hus.
244. Smyth, N. J. (1999, April). Breaking the boundaries of “talking cures” for PTSD: Exploring the role of EMDR. Paper presented at the annual meeting of the American Orthopsychiatric Association, Washington, DC.
Language: English
Format: Conference
245. Smyth, N. J. (1998, May). EMDR: An overview. Genessee County Mental Health Association, University at Buffalo Counseling Center, Buffalo, NY.
Language: English
Format: Other
246. Smyth, N. J. (1999, September). EMDR: An overview. Genessee County Mental Health Association, Batavia, NY.
Language: English
Format: Other
247. Smyth, N. J. (2003, June). EMDR through the paradigm prism. Paper presented at the New England Educational Institute Cape Cod Seminars, Eastham, MA.
Language: English
Format: Other
248. Smyth, N. J. (2004, March). Maximizing the impact of EMDR: Strategies for conceptualizing and organizing EMDR treatment plans. Specialty EMDR Training, Ann Arbor, MI.
Language: English
Format: Other
Abstract: Special Workshop
249. Smyth, N. J. (2004, April 23). Evidence-based and best practice treatment of trauma: An introduction to treatments for individuals. Paper presented at University of Buffalo School of Social Work Alumni Day.
Language: English
Format: Other
250. Smyth, N. J. (2004, September). Evidence-based practice: Ethical and clinical issues for EMDR therapists. Paper presented at the annual meeting of the EMDR International Association, Montreal, Quebec Canada.
Language: English
Format: Conference
Abstract: International and national movements toward evidence-based practice (EBP) in the treatment of health, mental health and substance abuse Problems are resulting in policy changes for therapists all over the world. This workshop will provide participants with an overview of the EBP movement and explore the ethical and clinical issues raised for EMDR practitioners.
Keywords: Ethics
251. Smyth, N. J., & Somit, N. (1997, April). Transcending trauma: EMDR applications in clinical practice. Paper presented at the annual meeting of the American Orthopsychiatric Association, Toronto, Ontario Canada.
Language: English
Format: Conference
252. Smyth, N. J., Rogers, S., & Silver, S. (1998, April). The many faces of EMDR: Clinical applications, research and use in humanitarian assistance efforts. Paper presented at the annual meeting of the American Orthopsychiatric Association, Washington, DC.
Language: English
Format: Conference
Keywords: Theory Practice Research Humanitarian Assistance
253. Soderlund, J. (2000). Integral EMDR. New Therapist, 9.
Language: English
Format: Magazine
Abstract: An exclusive interview with Francine Shapiro, the originator of Eye Movement Desensitisation and Reprocessing, on why it's a protypically integrative approach
Keywords: Interview Theory Practice
254. Solomon, S., & Johnson, D. (2002, August). Psychosocial treatment of posttraumatic stress disorder: A practice-friendly review of outcome research. Journal of Clinical Psychology, 58(8), 947-959.
Language: English
Format: Journal
Abstract: Examines the use of combined cognitive and behavioral techniques in the treatment of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Factors considered in the treatment of PTSD; Consideration of psychosocial treatments; Characterization of trauma.(Wiley)
Keywords: PTSD
255. Solvey, P. & Ferrazzano de Solvey, R. C. . EMDR: Avances en teoría y técnica - [EMDR: Advances in theory and technical]. Series de Terapias de Avan Zada, Vol. 4. Buenos Aires: TdeA Ediciones.
Language: Spanish
Format: Book Section
Abstract: Una puesta al día de nuevos y originales avances en la teoría y técnica de EMDR.
A roll forward original and new developments in theory and technique of EMDR.
256. Solvey, P., & Ferrazzano of Solvey, R. C. (2008). Nuevas aportaciones acerca del funcionamiento de EMDR - [Further contributions about how EMDR functions]. In P. Solvey & R. C. Ferrazzano de Solvey (Eds.), Terapias de avanzada - [Advanced therapies] : Vol. 4, EMDR: avances en teoria y tecnica - [EMDR: Advances in theory and technique] (1st ed) (pp. 11-22) Buenos Aires: TdeA Ediciones.
Language: Spanish
Format: Book Section
Abstract: No abstract available.
257. Solvey, P., Ferrazzano de Solvey, R. C., & Lescano, R. (2003, June). Simposio EMDR: Consideraciones sobre su funcionamiento y casos clínicos - [EMDR symposium: Considerations on the functioning and clinical cases]. III Congreso Internacional de Trauma Psíquico y Estrés Traumático, Sociedad Argentina de Psicotraumatologia, Buenos Aires, Argentina.
Language: Spanish
Format: Conference
Keywords: Simposio Symposium Theory Practice
258. Spinelli, I. ( ). EMDR: Nuevo abordaje en psicoterapia - [EMDR: A new approach in psychotherapy]. Unknown..
Language: Italian
Format: Other
Abstract: EMDR es un modelo psicoterapéutico creado en 1987 por la psicóloga norteamericana Francine Shapiro. Se le conoce por su sigla en inglés que corresponde a “Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing”. En español se lo nombra como “Desensibilización y Reprocesamiento por medio de Movimiento Ocular”. El hecho de que se lo nombre por los movimientos oculares guarda más relación con el momento histórico del descubrimiento que con el marco conceptual. Los movimientos oculares son sólo un componente de un enfoque integral y complejo. Shapiro observó casualmente que cuando tenía pensamientos perturbadores, sus ojos se movían en forma espontánea y rápida hacia arriba y hacia abajo y coincidentemente, los pensamientos desaparecían o perdían su potencial negativo. Repitiendo deliberadamente este proceso, es decir, concentrándose en pensamientos perturbadores y moviendo simultáneamente sus ojos, comprobó que los movimientos oculares tenían un efecto beneficioso sobre sus pensamientos y emociones. Este efecto, en el que las imágenes y pensamientos negativos desaparecen o ya no se sienten con la misma carga emocional, se conoce como “Desensibilización” y por esa causa, Shapiro llamó a su método EMD (Desensibilización por el Movimiento Ocular).
259. Spinney, L. (2007, February 3). When words fail us. New Scientist, 2589.
Language: English
Format: Magazine
260. Spiric, Z, Knezevic, G, Jovic, V., & Opacic, G. (Eds.) (2004). Tortura u ratu, posledice i rehabilitacija. Jugoslovensko iskustvo - [Torture in war: Consequences and rehabilitation of victims – Yugoslav experience]. Beograd: Centar za rehabilitaciju žrtava torture [Belgrade: International Aid Network].
Language: Serbian
Format: Book
Abstract: "Ideja o ovoj monografiji začela se nakon dve godine rada Centra za rehabilitaciju žrtava torture (CRŽT) u okviru Međunarodne mreže pomoći - IAN Beograd (International Aid Network - IAN Belgrade). Ona je bila izraz potrebe profesionalaca u IAN-u da svoja iskustva u radu sa žrtvama torture i traume podele sa širom, stručnom, profesionalnom i naučnom javnošću...
261. Staff. (2002, February). EMDR. The Harvard Mental Health Letter, 18(8), 4-5.
Language: English
Format: Newsletter
262. Staff. (2002, June). Clinician’s research digest. Review of special January issue on EMDR. American Psychological Association.
Language: English
Format: Magazine
263. Staff. ( ). Getting it right. KCAL, Los Angeles, CA.
Language: English
Format: Video
Abstract: Getting it Right
TV station KCAL in Los Angeles is a welcome exception
to the common practice of reporting combat PTSD as
untreatable. A video clip on their website reports how a
Desert Storm vet rushed to assist victims of a recent
automobile accident in Santa Monica and experienced a
combat-based flashback. The video recounts his subsequent
successful EMDR therapy with HAP supporter
Sarah Gilman after diagnosis at Dr. Daniel Amen’s
imaging research clinic.
You can see this rare media coverage
of combat PTSD with a good outcome at:
http://kcbs.dayport.com/launcher/1624/?tf=kcbs
viewer.tpl.
Note: If you have difficulty running the video, click on your
Pop-Up Blocker and temporarily “allow” it to show this
Dayport.com video.
264. Staff. (2004, July 7). Eye movement desensitization and reprocessing. Current Trends, 2(7), 1-2.
Language: English
Format: Magazine
Abstract: Over the last decade, Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprogramming (EMDR) has emerged as a well documented treatment for Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD). A growing body of research is exploring its application to the treatment of other pathological conditions, including substance use disorders. EMDR was developed in the late 1980s by Francine Shapiro, at the time a graduate student in English literature confronting a diagnosis of cancer. Ms. Shapiro noted that, when dealing with her own distressing memories, simultaneously focusing on eye movements appeared to decrease the associated negative emotions. She assumed that eye movements had a desensitizing effect, and upon further investigation found that others also had the same response to the technique.
265. Staff. (1998). Eye movement desensitization and reprocessing (EMDR). Glendale, CA: Audio-Digest Foundation.
Language: English
Format: Audio
266. Staff. (2007, June). The latest, greatest treatments for PTSD. The Carlat Psychiatry Report, 5(6).
Language: English
Format: Other
Abstract: At least in Britain, it’s official: psychotherapy works better than medication for PTSD. You shouldn’t be too surprised. The last time we covered PTSD (TCPR April 2004) we reviewed the SSRIs and found them to have evidence of only modest efficacy. Now, according to the latest treatment guidelines from Britain's National Institute for Clinical Excellence (NICE), antidepressants are no longer recommended as a first-line treatment, but cognitive therapy is. You can check out these guidelines for free at http://guidance.nice.org.uk/CG26/guidance/pdf/English.
267. Staff. (2002). EMDR... eye movement desensitization and reprocessing. The Harvard Mental Health Letter, 18(8), 4-5.
Language: English
Format: Newsletter
Abstract: Mental health professionals often disagree about some aspect of psychotherapy, but it’s rare for these disputes to be as prolonged and intense as they have been in the case of eye movement desensitization and reprocessing (EMDR). This unconventional technique, developed by the American psychologist Francine Shapiro, was originally intended for the treatment of traumatic stress reactions and anxietyprovoking memories.
268. Staff. (2007, August). Eye movement desensitisation and reprocessing (EMDR). The Birth Trauma Association Newsletter, 2-3.
Language: English
Format: Newsletter
Abstract: EMDR is a form of therapy developed by Dr Francine Shapiro in the 1980’s. She had noticed that whilst remembering an unpleasant event in her own life, she could take control over the impact it had on her emotionally by a series of rapid eye movements.
269. Strand, E. (2004, August). Does EMDR work?. Psychology Today, 37(4), 16.
Language: English
Format: Magazine
Abstract: Provides information on Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing therapy (EMDR), a single-session cure for post-traumatic stress disorder, addictions and phobias. Invention of EMDR; Details of an EMDR therapy; Controversy surrounding the therapy (Ebsco)
270. Swedish Council on Technology Assessment (2001). EMDR - Psychotherapy in posttraumatic stress syndrome in young people - early assessment briefs. Swedish Council on Technology Assessment in Health Care (SBU).
Language: English
Format: Publication
Abstract: Alert.
Keywords: PTSD Practice Guidelines
271. Sweet, A. (1992, April). Theoretical convergences. Paper presented at the EMDR Conference, Sunnyvale, CA.
Language: English
Format: Conference
272. Sweet, A. (1995, June). Diverse models of understanding EMDR generated material. Paper presented at the annual meeting of the EMDR International Association, Santa Monica, CA.
Language: English
Format: Conference
273. Taylor, G. (2003). Resolving trauma with EMDR - A client handout. Clinical Psychologist, Perth, Western Australia.
Language: English
Format: Other
274. Tekst, A. P., & Beeld, C. L. (2008, September). Genezen door EMDR. Psychologies Magazine, 31-33.
Language: Dutch
Format: Magazine
Abstract: Deskundigen breken zich het hoofd over een mogelijke verklaring. Het succes van een opmerkelijke behandelmethode.
Een paar maanden geleden is Meriam van
haar fiets gereden door een automobilist die
vond dat ze niet snel genoeg opzij ging. Ze
had een hersenschudding en een gebroken pols. Dat
is allemaal goed genezen, maar sindsdien slaapt ze
slecht. Ze heeft concentratieproblemen, schrikt telkens
als ze een motor hoort optrekken, en ze durft
niet meer in de stad te fietsen.
Een typisch voorbeeld van posttraumatische
275. Templeton, B. P. (1997, April 13). Eye therapy a new help to trauma victims. Unknown, E3.
Language: English
Format: Other
276. ten Broeke, E. & de Jongh, A. (2008). Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing. EMDR na seksueel misbruik. [Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing. EMDR following sexual abuse]. In N. Nicolai (red.), Handboek psychotherapie na seksueel misbruik. [Handbook psychotherapy following sexual abuse] (2e. herz. dr.) (pp. 183-207). Utrecht: De Tijdstroom.
Language: Dutch
Format: Book Section
Abstract: No abstract available.
277. ten Broeke, E., & de Jongh, A. (2008). Praktijkboek EMDR: Casusconceptualisatie en specifieke patiëntengroepen - [EMDR Practice Book: Casusconceptualisatie and specific patient groups]. Harcourt Publishers: Amsterdam.
Language: Dutch
Format: Book
Abstract: Casusconceptualisatie en specifieke patiëntengroepen Een aantal jaren geleden verscheen het Handboek EMDR: een geprotocolleerde behandelmethode voor de gevolgen van psychotrauma. Hierin wordt gedetailleerd en stapsgewijs beschreven hoe het basisprotocol van Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing, ofwel EMDR, in de praktijk moet worden uitgevoerd. Het Handboek EMDR is dan ook het leerboek bij de EMDR basistrainingen die door de Vereniging EMDR Nederland worden erkend. Wat in het handboek ontbreekt is informatie over de behandeling van lastige problematiek en ernstig beschadigde patiënten. Het Praktijkboek EMDR voorziet in deze lacune. Het is daarmee het boek waarmee de vele toepassingsmogelijkheden van deze methode op heldere wijze worden beschreven. Een aantal experts is gevraagd hun ervaringen met EMDR bij een specifieke doelgroep of stoornis (onder anderen kinderen, patiënten met eetstoornissen, complexe traumagerelateerde stoornissen of ernstige persoonlijkheidspathologie) te beschrijven. De nadruk ligt daarbij op de praktijk. Om deze bijdragen van een kader te voorzien wordt allereerst uitgebreid stilgestaan bij de voor EMDR kenmerkende wijze van conceptualiseren van klachten, het identificeren van de juiste targets en de daaruit voortvloeiende behandeling. Daaropvolgend wordt uitgelegd op welke wijze specifieke en specialistische interventies (bijvoorbeeld Resource Development and Installation (RDI) en Cognitive interweaves) kunnen worden ingezet. Dit wordt geïllustreerd aan de hand van heldere protocollen, opmerkelijke casuïstiek en verduidelijkende stukjes dialoog. Het boek is daarmee een must voor iedere behandelaar in de GGZ die de volledige reikwijdte van EMDR wil leren gebruiken.
278. ten Broeke, E., & de Jongh, A. (2003). Eye movement desensitization and reprocessing. In N. Nicolai (Ed.), Handboek psychotherapie na seksueel misbruik, druk 1 - [Handbook psychotherapy following sexual abuse] (pp. 179-199). Utrecht: De Tijdstroom.
Language: Dutch
Format: Book Section
Abstract: No abstract available.
279. Thyer, B. A. (2001, January). Research on social work practice does not benefit from blurry theory: A response to Tomi Gomory. Journal of Social Work Education, 37(1), 51-66 .
Language: English
Format: Journal
Abstract: Abstract: Cognitive-behavioral therapy is a well-supported evidence-based psychosocial treatment that clinically and significantly helps clients meeting the DSM criteria for obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD). Dozens of well-controlled clinical trials and dozens of single-subject studies bear this out, many designed and conducted by social workers. Most of these studies have involved Caucasian clients, a few used African Americans. But both groups seem to respond well, as do both males and females. Suppose a social worker has a new client from Mongolia with OCD. Falsificationism may well be the strongest approach to scientific inquiry regarding the validity of theories. The American Psychiatric Association used the following types of evidence in developing its practice guidelines: a randomized clinical trial, prospectively designed with double-blind assessments and treatment and control groups, a clinical trial, similarly prospective, but lacking blind assessments or control groups, cohort or longitudinal studies and case-control studies, retrospective studies of clients. [Author abstract]
Keywords: Letter
280. Thyer, B. A. (2001, January). What is the role of theory in research on social work practice?. Journal of Social Work Education, 37(1), 9-25 .
Language: English
Format: Journal
Abstract: IN 1967, WHEN I WAS 14 YEARS OLD, Scott Briar (1967) labeled the state of affairs with respect to research on social casework as a "crisis," in part because our field lacked evidence of the effectiveness of social work services. In the mid-1970s, shortly after I graduated from high school, Joel Fischer (1973a, 1973b, 1976) published articles and a book effectively documenting Briar's assertion that the field lacked a strong evidentiary basis for service.
Keywords: Research
281. Tibaldi, M. (1996, June). Analytical psychology and EMDR: “active imagination” and “eye movements” in Jungian practice. Paper presented at the annual meeting of the EMDR International Association, Denver, CO.
Language: English
Format: Conference
Abstract: In this paper I shall be talking about the integration of eye movements in Jungian analysis. I am going to open my paper with a short historical premise, in order to frame Carl Gustav Jung's analytical psychology within the broader context of depth psychologies; then I shall be describing the most important concepts of Jungian model and the methodology of active imagination, explaining, to the end, through a short clinical example, the reasons why I have been induced to integrate 'eye movements' and 'active imagination' in the analytical setting, to process, in particular, 'opaque' somatic symptoms. The aim of this paper is to point out, on the one hand, the surprising affinity among some aspects of the Jungian model, EMDR and the results of contemporary neuro-scientific trauma researchs and to show, on the other hand, the synergic effect of eye movements and active imagination in enlightening and unconscious sufferings.
Keywords: Analytical Psychology Jung
282. Truffo, C. (2007, July-August). Beyond technophobia: Even you can use the internet to grow your practice. Psychotherapy Networker, 31(4), 42-47, 58.
Language: English
Format: Journal
Abstract: In the coming decade, online searches will be the primary way therapists attract clients. Therapists need to do three things to get under way: establish a "web presence," help web browsers get to know them and their practice, and make it easy for browsers to become clients.
Keywords: Psychotherapy Therapists Online Advertising Internet Market Strategy
283. U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs & U.S. Department of Defense. (2004). VA/DoD clinical practice guidelines for the management of post-traumatic stress. U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs & U.S. Department of Defense, Washington, DC.
Language: English
Format: Publication
Abstract: EMDR was one of four therapies given the highest level of evidence and recommended for treatment of PTSD.
Keywords: Treatment Guidelines
284. U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs,Veterans Health Adminstration & Department of Defense. (2004, January). VA/DoD clinical practice guideline for the management of post-traumatic stress. Version 1.0. Washington (DC): Veterans Health Administration, and Department of Defense.
Language: English
Format: Publication
Abstract: Version 1.0. [479 references]
Keywords: U.S. Veterans Health Administration U.S. Department of Defense PTSD Treatment Guidelines
285. United Kingdom Department of Health. (2001). Treatment choice in psychological therapies and counselling; evidence based clinical practice guideline. London, England: Department of Health.
Language: English
Format: Publication
Abstract: Best evidence of efficacy was reported for EMDR, exposure, and stress inoculation.
Keywords: Treatment Guidelines
286. Unknown. (2009). EMDR: Healing the soul through the windows of the eyes. What doctors don't tell you, 19(10), 22.
Language: English
Format: Magazine
Abstract: British Library Serials
287. Ursano, R. J., Bell, C., Eth, S., Friedman, M., Norwood, A., Pfefferbaum, B., Pynoos, R. S., Zatzick, D. F., & Benedek, D. M. (2004, November). Practice guideline for the treatment of patients with acute stress disorder and posttraumatic stress disorder. Arlington, VA: American Psychiatric Association, 1-95.
Language: English
Format: Other
Abstract: Originally published in November 2004. A guideline watch, summarizing significant developments in the scientific literature since publication of this guideline, may be available in the Psychiatric Practice section of the APA web site at www.psych.org.
Keywords: Practice Guidelines
288. van der Kolk, B. A. (1994, January). The body keeps the score: Memory and the evolving psychobiology of posttraumatic stress by Bessel van der Kolk. Harvard Review of Psychiatry, 1(5): 253-265, Asociacion EMDR Espana.
Language: English
Format: Journal
Abstract: Ever since people's responses to overwhelming experiences have been systematically explored, researchers have noted that a trauma is stored in somatic memory and expressed as changes in the biological stress response. Intense emotions at the time of the trauma initiate the long-term conditional responses to reminders of the event, which are associated both with chronic alterations in the physiological stress response and with the amnesias and hypermnesias characteristic of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Continued physiological hyperarousal and altered stress hormone secretion affect the ongoing evaluation of sensory stimuli as well. Although memory is ordinarily an active and constructive process, in PTSD failure of declarative memory may lead to organization of the trauma on a somatosensory level (as visual images or physical sensations) that is relatively impervious to change. The inability of people with PTSD to integrate traumatic experiences and their tendency, instead, to continuously relieve the past are mirrored physiologically and hormonally in the misinterpretation of innocuous stimuli as potential threats. Animal research suggests that intense emotional memories are processed outside of the hippocampally mediated memory system and are difficult to extinguish. Cortical activity can inhibit the expression of these subcortically based emotional memories. The effectiveness of this inhibition depends, in part, on physiological arousal and neurohormonal activity. These formulations have implications for both the psychotherapy and the pharmacotherapy of PTSD.[MLM MEDLINE]
Keywords: Theory Practice Neurobiology
289. van der Kolk, B. A. (2006, June). Mas alla de la cura por el dialogo: Experienca somatica, improntas subcorticales y tratamiento del trauma - [Beyond talking cure: Somatic experience, subcortical imprints and the treatment of trauma]. Paper presented at the annual mmeting of the EMDR Europe Association, Istanbul, Turkey.
Language: Spanish
Format: Conference
Abstract: "Utilizamos nuestras mentes, más bien para ocultar hechos antes, que para descubrirlos. Una de las cosas que la pantalla oculta más eficazmente es el cuerpo, nuestro propio cuerpo, refiriéndome con ello, a las partes internas y externas, a sus interiores. Al igual que un velo arrojado sobre la piel para cubrir su pudor, la pantalla elimina parcialmente de la mente los estados internos del cuerpo, aquéllos que constituyen el flujo de vida según se avanza en el viaje de cada día." Damasio (1999, p. 28)
290. Vaughan, K. (1992, July). The specificity of symptom change in post-traumatic stress disorder treated with eye movement desensitisation. Paper presented at the Fourth World Congress on Behaivour Therapy, Queensland, Australia .
Language: English
Format: Conference
Abstract: Since official recognition of post-traumatic stress a number of ways. These include intrusive recollections, indicated by nightmares or “flashbacks” to the event, avoidance of stimuli associated with the trauma, and increased arousal (DSM-III-R, 1987). Behavioural approaches have been somewhat successful in treatment (e.g.., Cooper & Clum, 1989; Keane & Kalouped, 1982) however, such methods have been time consuming, require intense effort by the patient, and symptom improvement can be slow.
291. Veltman, D. (2007, Apr). Feedback from the E.M.D.R.I.A. Conference. Australiasian Society of Traumatic Stress Studies, WA Chapter Newsletter, 3(2), 3.
Language: English
Format: Newsletter
Abstract: The plenary guest speaker was Francine Shapiro PhD, the originator and developer of Eye Movement Desensitisation and Reprocessing (E.M.D.R.).
292. Vojtova, H. (2007). European Congress of EMDR (eye movement desensitization and reprocessing). Psychiatria-Bratislava, 14(Part 2/3), 127-128.
Language: English
Format: Journal
Abstract: No abstract available.
293. Volpe, J. (2000). Trauma response profile: Francine Shapiro, Ph.D., B.C.E.T.S.. Trauma Response, VI(1), 6-9.
Language: English
Format: Journal
Abstract: This interview originally appeared in the Fall/WInter, 2000 Edition of Trauma Response.
Keywords: Theory Practice Francine Shapiro Interview
294. Volpe, J. (2000). Trauma response profile: Francine Shapiro, Ph.D., B.C.E.T.S.. Trauma Response, VI(2), 39-42.
Language: English
Format: Journal
Keywords: Theory Practice Francine Shapiro
295. Wachter, M. (2004, January 29). EMDR – inte bara traumabehandling - [EMDR - not just trauma treatment]. . Margaretha Wächter Leg psykolog, Leg psykoterapeut, Uppsatsforfattarna besokte sidan.
Language: Swedish
Format: Other
296. Wachter, M. (2002). EMDR — inte bara traumabehandling - [EMDR - not just trauma treatment]. Psykisk Hälsa [Psychic Health], 3, 256-266.
Language: Swedish
Format: Journal
297. Wada, H. (2000). Psychopathology and treatment of traumatic mental disorders. On the vicissitude and controversy around theory and practice. Seishin Shinkeigaku Zasshi [Psychiatria et Neurologia Japonica], 102(4), 335-354.
Language: English
Format: Journal
Abstract: Recently, among advanced nations, including the United States, there have been growing interest in trauma related psychopathology. Regarding Japan, since Hanshin Awaji Great Earthquake and Sarin gas terrorism by Aum Shinrikyo, interest for psychological trauma has grown high. It is only about twenty years since active research and discussion around these issues started. Therefore, there are still hot dispute around psychopathology of these disorders. Also, therapeutic method is ever progressing. Regarding psychotherapy, there remain a lot of dispute and no general agreement has been made. In this paper, I would like to summarize the literature on psychological trauma and trauma-related psychopathology historically and provide current overview about the theory and practice of this pathology. The summary of the overview is as follows: 1. Psychological trauma is defined as a state caused by traumatic event described in DSM-IV, not as a traumatic event itself. Traumatic mental disorder should be understood as a spectrum of disorders, ranging from phobias and panic reactions related to distinct traumatic events to personality disorders, where intense and chronic traumatic experience is integrated into the personality organization. 2. Historically speaking, traumatic disorders were studied from two directions; war neuroses and etiology of hysteria. Each is corresponds to physioneurosis model and memory processing disturbance model, respectively, which is thought to be two major etiological models of this disorder. 3. Regarding treatment, although corresponding therapeutic idea for each model is provided, currently, most promising treatments are pharmacotherapy using SSRI and novel cognitive-behavioral techniques such as PE (prolonged exposure treatment), SIT (stress inoculation training) and EMDR (eye movement desensitization and reprocessing). As for psychotherapy, hot arguments has been done as to how authentic recovered traumatic memories are and how to deal with them. Regardless of these disputes, it is essential to establish empathic therapeutic bond with the patients.
Keywords: Review
298. Waldman, B. S. (2001). The utilization of eye movement desensitization reprocessing as a therapeutic tool. California State University, San Bernardino. --.
Language: English
Format: Dissertation/Thesis
Abstract: Thesis--(M.S.W.)
299. Weisensee, K. (1999, June). N=1: The 1st guinea pig’s report of its experiences with experimental software for self-administering. EMDRIA Newsletter, 4(2), 13, 28, 32.
Language: English
Format: Newsletter
Abstract: What a weird thing – that was my first thought, as I read a short notice about EMDR for the first time. A work in a psychiatric/psychotherapeutic day treatment programme, the number of multiple-traumatised patients increased rapidly. One patient decided to climb the roof and jumped, nearly to her death, driven by the memories of long-ago cruelties her father had done to her. With this in mind, I was conscious of urgently needing a method to treat these patients and finding something to manage the challenges of intrusive pictures and memories.
300. Wendling, P. (2008, December). Knowledge gap exists on best practices for PTSD. Clinical Psychiatry News, 36(12), 10.
Language: English
Format: Newsletter
Keywords: Practice Posttraumatic Stress Disorder PTSD
301. Wheeler, K. (2009, August). Integrating outcome measurement and EMDR research into your practice. Paper presented at the annual meeting of the EMDR International Association, Atlanta, GA.
Language: English
Format: Conference
Abstract: Outcome measurement in practice is critically important in determining the ‘value’ of EMDR to clients, insurers, policymakers, the general public and ourselves. This presentation will provide the EMDR clinician with guidelines about the what, who, when and how to incorporate outcome measurement into one’s own practice using a time-series case study design. Comparing the client’s own scores at different points in time to themselves is considered a bona fide research design that makes an empirically valid case study worthy of publication. Resources and opportunities available to the budding EMDR researcher are examined.
Keywords: Outcome Measurement
302. Wildwind, L. (1999). Essential experience interweaves: Deepening resource installation for personality change; An advanced workshop and clinical practice with case consultation. Paper presented at the Minnesota EMDR Network, Minneapolis, MN.
Language: English
Format: Other
Keywords: Essential Experience Interweaves RDI Resource Developing Installation
303. Work Group on Panic Disorder. (2008). Practice Guideline for the treatment of patients with panic disorder, 2nd Edition. APA Practice Guidelines, 90 pp.
Language: English
Format: Publication
Abstract: Eye movement desensitization and reprocessing was originally developed as a treatment for posttraumatic stress disorder (206), but it has been studied as a possible treatment for panic disorder. Eye movement desensitization and reprocessing involves reprocessing distressing memories while engaging in guided eye movement. When applied to panic disorder, EMDR targets distressing memories such as the memory of the first panic attack and life events that the patient associates with panic disorder (207).
Keywords: Practice Guidelines
304. Wylie, M. S. (1996, July-August). Under the microscope: Eye movement desensitization and reprocessing (EMDR). Family Therapy Newtworker, 20(4), 25-37.
Language: English
Format: Journal
305. Wylie, M. S. & Butler, K. (1994, November-December). Around the Network; Who's running the show? [and] The EMDR rollercoaster. Family Therapy Networker, 18(6), 10-26.
Language: English
Format: Journal
Abstract: IN THE PAST 12 MONTHS, psychologist Francine Shapiro has lived out the dream of every therapeutic innovator. Since last November, when the Networker featured her once-obscure discovery, Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR), on its cover, the promising but little-understood new trauma therapy has become almost as famous as Prozac.[Author]
306. Yarvis, J. S., & Spivey, C. (2003, Fall-Winter). Eye movement desensitization and reprocessing: Ethical considerations of EMDR marketing, training, and research. The Scientific Review of Mental Health Practice, 2(2), 89-95.
Language: English
Format: Journal
Abstract: Eye movement desensitization and reprocessing (EMDR) has been both popularized and criticized in recent literature. Although a number of investigators continue to examine the efficacy of EMDR, few articles have critically evaluated the training practices and requirements for EMDR certification. This editorial is a qualitative and informal look into some of the training practices and requirements of EMDR level I training. The marketing of EMDR is discussed to identify ethical concerns relevant to EMDR's promotion. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2008 APA, all rights reserved)
Keywords: Ethical Considerations Training Practices Professional Standards Professional Certification
307. Yoeli, F. R. (2000). Fran’s ramblings from Israel: A very personal view of tragedy. The EMDR Practitioner: EMDREA.
Language: English
Format: Other
Abstract: This is a difficult article to write because I truly cannot figure out what is going to happen next. The holidays for us are over tomorrow and that means going back to a regular work schedule. During these holidays people usually do funthings with their children such as travelling around the country to national parks, take little children to the special parks for them, go up north to enjoy the autumn atmosphere or go down south to simply enjoy. Lots of people usually go to movies as families, spend shopping time in malls and do the eating out fun things.
Keywords: Israel Theory Practice
308. Zangwill, W. M. (1993, March). And still more. the Behavior Therapist, 16(3), 89.
Language: English
Format: Journal
Abstract: This article continues "More thoughts on EMDR training" by J. Kleinman (entry 1691)
309. Zeiss, A. (1998). EMDR 1997 update. the Behavior Therapist, 21, 28.
Language: English
Format: Journal
310. Zelling, D. (1995). Eye movement desensitizaion reprocessing (E.M.D.R.): An explanation. Medical Hypnoanalysis Journal, 10(2), 278.
Language: English
Format: Journal
Abstract: No abstract available.
