Medicalizing Counselling, Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 2017
Issues and Tensions

Palgrave Studies in the Theory and History of Psychology Series

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Language: English

126.59 €

In Print (Delivery period: 15 days).

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Medicalizing Counselling
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Support: Print on demand

126.59 €

In Print (Delivery period: 15 days).

Add to cartAdd to cart
Medicalizing Counselling
Publication date:
Support: Print on demand
This book discusses how counselling, a profession known for diverse and innovative practices, has recently been influenced by scientific, marketplace, and administrative developments corresponding with a medicalized focus on psychiatric diagnoses and related evidence-based treatments. Tensions associated with this medicalized focus refer to competing logics and accountabilities regarding how to understand and address concerns brought to counselling. Tom Strong reviews such tensions as they relate to counsellors? approaches to practice experienced as incompatible with a medicalized approach. The role of media and technology, therapy culture, and counsellor education, are examined with respect to medicalizing tensions that professionals and clients of counselling increasingly face. The book will interest readers who share concerns regarding the potential for a mental health monoculture grounded in the diagnose and treatment logic of medicalized counselling.
1. Tensions in Medicalizing the Talking ‘Cure’.- 2. Discourses of Counselling and Human Concern.- 3. Human Concerns as Diagnosable Mental Health Disorders.- 4. Legitimizing an Emergent Mental Health ‘Monoculture’?.- 5. Individualizing and Socializing the Mental Health Monoculture.- 6. Medicating and Technologizing our Diagnosable Lives.- 7. Medicalizing Tensions Associated with Administering and Regulating Counselling.- 8. Tensions for Front Line Counsellors?.- 9. Tensions in Training Counsellors?.- 10. Living with Tensions Associated with Medicalizing Counselling.

Tom Strong is a professor, couple and family therapist, and counsellor-educator at the University of Calgary, Canada. He researches and writes on the collaborative, critically-informed and practical potentials of discursive approaches to psychotherapy. 
Traces developments and current controversies associated with counselling’s movement toward increased medicalization Highlights implications not only for practice, but for society at large Offers a critical approach to the tensions currently present in medicalized counselling Includes supplementary material: sn.pub/extras