Dr Daniel Freeman is the leading clinical psychologist of his generation. Still only in his mid-thirties, he is a Wellcome Trust Fellow, a Senior Lecturer at the Institute of Psychiatry, King’s College London, and a consultant clinical psychologist in the South London and Maudsley NHS Trust.
He publishes prolifically in leading international journals, makes regular keynote addresses at international conferences and is an Associate Editor of the British Journal of Clinical Psychology. A key figure in the latest developments in cognitive behaviour therapy, he teaches and supervises clinicians across the globe.
His work has brought interviews with the likes of Radio 4 and the BBC World Service, and with national newspapers such as The Times, Guardian, and Daily Mail. He is young enough to continue playing five-a-side football twice a week, but old enough to wonder for how much longer.
Jason Freeman is a freelance writer and editor. Educated at Cambridge and Sussex universities, he spent ten years working in academic publishing before getting the technology bug and embarking on a new career as a designer and writer in the software industry. The technology bug having worn off, he has returned to the world of books, writing and editing titles in the areas of popular psychology and self-help, film and children’s fiction.
He lives in Sheffield with his wife and three children. When not in front of his laptop, his time is mainly spent running round after the kids. When not running round after the kids, he enjoys the cinema, walking in the Peaks and wondering where to begin with the garden.
'This is the definitive practical guide from the leaders in the field on a hugely important topic. Written in an engaging, easy-to-understand style, the book tells how new research on paranoia is revealing how best to overcome it. The first edition helped many thousands of sufferers and the second edition promises even more.' Mark Williams, Emeritus Professor of Clinical Psychology, University of Oxford, co-author of Mindfulness: Finding Peace in a Frantic World
'The authors of this excellent and timely book have played a major role in developing our understanding of how suspicious thoughts arise and, crucially, how we can learn to cope with them.' Nicholas Tarier, Professor of Clinical Psychology, Manchester University
Learn how to overcome your feelings of paranoia
Do you feel as if others are out to get you? Research shows that 20-30 percent of people in the UK frequently have paranoid or suspicious thoughts about other people. These feelings can make life a misery.
In this fully revised and expanded new edition, the authors explain how cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT) techniques can be used to treat this disorder by changing unhelpful patterns of behaviour and thought.
Overcoming self-help guides use clinically proven CBT techniques to treat long-standing and disabling conditions, both psychological and physical. Many guides in the Overcoming series are recommended under the Reading Well Books on Prescription scheme.
Título : Overcoming Paranoid and Suspicious Thoughts, 2nd Edition
EAN : 9781472135957
Editorial : Little, Brown Book Group
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