Rating: ****
Tags: Hypnosis, Medicine, Lang:en
Added: July 28, 2020
Modified: November 5, 2021
Summary
What is hypnosis? Despite widespread misconceptions,
hypnosis is not a treatment in itself; instead, it is a
facilitator -- a useful diagnostic tool that can help the
practitioner choose an appropriate treatment modality and
accelerate various primary treatment strategies. The second
edition of this remarkable work (first published 25 years
ago) is written to provide both beginning and seasoned
practitioners with a brief, disciplined technique for
mobilizing and learning from an individual's capacity to
concentrate. Putting to rest both exaggerated fears about
hypnosis and overblown statements of its efficacy, this
compelling volume brings scientific discipline to a
systematic exploration of the clinical uses and limitations
of hypnosis. The challenge was to develop a clinical
measurement that could transform a fascinating amalgam of
anecdotes, speculations, clinical intuitions and
observations, and laboratory advances into a more fruitful
and systematic body of information. Thus was born the
authors' Hypnotic Induction Profile (HIP), a crucial
10-minute clinical assessment procedure that relates the
spectrum of hypnotizability to personality style,
psychopathology, and treatment outcome. Structured to reflect
the flow of a typical evaluation and treatment session and
highlighted by case examples throughout, this remarkable
synthesis describes how to use the HIP, reviews relevant
literature, and details principles and short- and long-term
treatment strategies for smoking control; eating disorders;
anxiety, concentration, and insomnia; phobias; pain control;
psychosomatic disorders and conversion symptoms;
trichotillomania; stuttering; and acute and posttraumatic
stress disorders and dissociation. Meticulously referenced
and indexed, this in-depth work concludes with an appendix on
the interpretation and standardization of the HIP.This unique
work stands out in the literature because - It is written
both as an introduction for practitioners new to hypnosis and
as an in-depth guide for practitioners with wide experience
in hypnosis.- Unlike current clinical works, it emphasizes
the importance of performing a systematic assessment of
hypnotizability to identify, measure, and utilize a given
patient's optimal therapeutic potential -- a process that,
until now, has been relegated to clinical intuition.- It
describes human behavior phenomenologically as it relates to
hypnosis in a probable rather than an absolute fashion.- It
reviews only specific portions of the literature that are
particularly relevant to the important themes presented by
the authors. Wherever possible, the authors apply statistical
methods to test their hypotheses. The realm of scientific
investigation encompassing hypnosis and psychological
dysfunction is comparatively new. This exceptional volume,
with its profusion of systematic data, will spark controversy
and interest among scientific students of hypnosis
everywhere, from psychiatrists, psychologists, and
psychoanalysts to physicians, dentists, and other interested
clinicians. **