Personality Assessment in Treatment Planning: Use of the MMPI-2 and BTPI (Oxford Textbooks in Clinical Psychology) Buy on Amazon
Facebook LinkedIn

Personality Assessment in Treatment Planning: Use of the MMPI-2 and BTPI (Oxford Textbooks in Clinical Psychology)

79.00 USD

Temporarily out of stock.

Book Details
Author(s) Butcher, James
ISBN / ASIN 0195330978
ISBN-13 9780195330977
Availability Temporarily out of stock.
Category Psychology
Marketplace United States 🇺🇸
Ratings & Reviews No reviews yet — be the first!

No reviews yet.

Description
The establishment of frank and honest communication is one of the most important early goals of psychotherapy. Indeed, the most prominent challenge in the early stages of treatment is to develop a comfortable relationship that allows disclosure. In this volume, the authors show that objectively interpreted personality measures can be applied in psychotherapeutic assessments to facilitate an understanding of the patient and a thriving treatment program.
Successful psychotherapy depends upon an early understanding of the patient's problems and personality and the establishment of attainable treatment goals. The extensive accumulated base of knowledge about personality and its maladjustment has become crucial when making treatment decisions about individuals in psychotherapy, and the field of personality assessment provides both methods and substantive information to support treatment-oriented evaluation.
The MMPI has a long tradition of providing personality information about clients in mental health settings since the 1940s. James Butcher participated in the creation of the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory (MMPI-2) in 1989, which has continued to be one of the most commonly used personality tests in clinical evaluation. Over a thousand studies have been conducted on the effectiveness of the MMPI in treatment related assessments. Here, Butcher and co-author Julia Perry explore the MMPI-2 as well as a new assessment tool, the Butcher Treatment Planning Inventory (BTPI). In using psychological evaluation techniques for treatment planning, many clinicians incorporate information from a broad base of instruments-clinical interview, projective testing, behavioral data, and personal history-and do not rely on data from a single source. Therefore, while this volume focuses on the use of the MMPI-2 and the BTPI in treatment planning, it will provide a context not to the exclusion of other measures.
Donate to EbookNetworking
Previous Book CDEV (with Review Card and ... Next Book Psychological Autopsy of El...
Previous CDEV (with Review...
Next Psychological Aut...