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Volume . Roots and Branches
Editorial Board
About the Editors-in-Chief
Contributors
Series Preface
Introduction to the Handbook
Volume Introduction
Part I. History
Chapter . Early History of Clinical Psychology ( 89 amp ndash
949)
Ingrid G. Ferreras
Chapter 2. History of Clinical Psychology Following World War
II
Ingrid G. Farreras, Donald K. Routh, and Robin L. Cautin
Part II. Specialties
Chapter 3. Infant Mental Health
Joy D. Osofsky
Chapter 4. Clinical Child Psychology
Alan Carr
Chapter 5. Pediatric Psychology
Anne E. Kazak, Erica Sood, and Michael C. Roberts
Chapter . Adolescent Clinical Psychology
John E. Lochman, Caroline Boxmeyer, and Nicole Powell
Chapter 7. Emerging Adult Clinical Psychology
Jennifer L. Tanner and Jeffrey J. Arnett
Chapter 8. Adult Clinical Psychology
Thomas G. Plante and Lori G. Plante
Chapter 9. Clinical Geropsychology
Gregory A. Hinrichsen
Chapter . Family Psychology
Mark Stanton, Thomas L. Sexton, and Susan H. McDaniel
Chapter . Community-Clinical Psychology
Leonard A. Jason and Darrin M. Aase
Chapter 2. Clinical Health Psychology
Timothy W. Smith, Paula G. Williams, and John M. Ruiz
Chapter 3. Clinical Neuropsychology
Robert J. Spencer and Kenneth M. Adams
Chapter 4. Forensic Psychology
Ronald Roesch and Patricia A. Zapf
Chapter 5. Prescribing Psychology and Pharmacotherapy
Morgan T. Sammons
Part III. Emerging Specialties
Chapter . Occupational Clinical Psychology
James Campbell Quick and Cary L. Cooper
Chapter 7. Clinical Sport Psychology
Kate F. Hays and Amy Baltzell
Chapter 8. Clinical Behavioral Analysis
Gregory J. Madden, Gregory P. Hanley, Michael J. Dougher
Part IV. Settings
Chapter 9. Elementary and Secondary Schools
Olivia Moorehead-Slaughter and Frank C. Worrell
Chapter 2 . Psychiatric Hospitals
Anthony A. Menditto, William D. Spaulding, and Richard H.
Hunter
Chapter 2 . Outpatient Clinics
Julianne M. Smith-Boydston and Sarah B. Kirk
Chapter 22. Colleges and Universities
Rosie Phillips Bingham and Jennifer A. Erickson Cornish
Chapter 23. Veteran Affairs
Antonette M. Zeiss, Robert A. Zeiss, and David Carroll
Chapter 24. Independent Practices
Melba J. T. Vasquez and Jennifer F. Kelly
Chapter 25. General Hospitals
Linda Maria Garcia-Shelton
Chapter 2 . Primary Care Settings
James H. Bray
Chapter 27. Business and Other Organizations
Rodney L. Lowman
Chapter 28. Military Settings
W. Brad Johnson
Chapter 29. Physical Rehabilitation Facilities
Timothy R. Elliott and Erin E. Andrews
Chapter 3 . Addiction Treatment Settings
Mark D. Schenker
Chapter 3 . Correctional Settings
Philip R. Magaletta, Patti Butterfield, and Marc W. Patry
Index
Volume 2. Theory and Research
Editorial Board
Contributors
Volume Introduction
Part I. Theoretical Approaches
Chapter . Evolution of Theory in Clinical Psychology
Christie Pugh Karpiak, John C. Norcross, and Danny Wedding
Chapter 2. Psychoanalytic Theories
David L. Wolitzky
Chapter 3. Psychodynamic Theories
Jacques P. Barber and Nili Solomonov
Chapter 4. Behavioral Theories
Daniel B. Fishman
Chapter 5. Humanistic amp ndash Existential Theories
Jeanne C. Watson and Kirk Schneider
Chapter . Cognitive Theories
Raymond DiGiuseppe, Daniel David, and Rachel Venezia
Chapter 7. Interpersonal Theory
Joshua D. Lipsitz and John C. Markowitz
Chapter 8. Systemic Theories
Thomas L. Sexton and Mark Stanton
Chapter 9. Multicultural Theories
Lillian Comas-D amp iacute az and Laura S. Brown
Chapter . Mindfulness and Acceptance Theories
Victoria M. Follette and Holly Hazlett-Stevens
Chapter . Integrative Theories
John C. Norcross, Marvin R. Goldfried, and Danielle Arigo
Part II. Research Approaches
Chapter 2. Qualitative Methods
Heidi M. Levitt
Chapter 3. Case Studies
Daniel B. Fishman
Chapter 4. Epidemiology
Kathleen Ries Merikangas and Brooke Sheppard
Chapter 5. Classification and Diagnosis Research
Thomas A. Widiger and Stephanie Mullins-Sweatt
Chapter . Test Development and Validation
Kurt F. Geisinger
Chapter 7. Single-Participant Designs
Ruth M. Hurst and Nicole T. Jones
Chapter 8. Longitudinal Designs
Aidan G. C. Wright and Kristian E. Markon
Chapter 9. Multivariate Methods
Stewart A. Shankman and Thomas M. Olino
Chapter 2 . Process amp ndash Outcome Studies
Susan Llewelyn, James Macdonald, and Katie Aafjes-van Doorn
Chapter 2 . Treatment Outcome Studies
Michael J. Lambert and Benjamin M. Ogles
Chapter 22. Meta-Analysis
A.C. Del Re and Christoph Fl amp uuml ckiger
Chapter 23. Neurophysiology and Neuroimaging
Robin Nusslock
Index
Volume 3. Applications and Methods
Editorial Board
Contributors
Volume Introduction
Part I. Assessment
Chapter . Clinical Interview
John Sommers-Flanagan
Chapter 2. Behavioral Observations and Assessment
Randy W. Kamphaus and Bridget V. Dever
Chapter 3. Psychometrics and Testing
Thomas P. Hogan and William T. Tsushima
Chapter 4. Mental Ability Assessment
Mark Benisz, Ron Dumont, and Alan S. Kaufman
Chapter 5. Personality Traits and Dynamics
Robert F. Bornstein
Chapter . Psychopathology Assessment
Radhika Krishnamurthy and Gregory J. Meyer
Chapter 7. Neuropsychological Assessment
James B. Hale, Gabrielle Wilcox, and Linda A. Reddy
Chapter 8. Forensic Assessment
Eric Y. Drogin and Jhilam Biswas
Chapter 9. Vocational and Interest Assessment
Nadya A. Fouad and Jane L. Swanson
Chapter . Couple and Family Assessment
Douglas K. Snyder, Richard E. Heyman, Stephen N. Haynes, Cindy L.
Carlson, and Christina Balderama-Durbin
Chapter . Health Psychology Assessment
Ronald H. Rozensky, Deidre B. Pereira, and Nicole E. Whitehead
Chapter 2. Case Formulation and Treatment Planning
Barbara L. Ingram
Chapter 3. Assessment With Racial/Ethnic Minorities and Special
Populations
Lisa A. Suzuki and Leo Wilton
Part II. Treatment
Chapter 4. Individual Psychotherapy
Irving B. Weiner
Chapter 5. Group Psychotherapy
Gerald Corey and Marianne Schneider Corey
Chapter . Couple Therapy
Anthony L. Chambers, Alexandra H. Solomon, and Alan S. Gurman
Chapter 7. Family Therapy
Jay L. Lebow and Catherine B. Stroud
Chapter 8. Psychopharmacological Therapy
Morgan T. Sammons
Chapter 9. Biomedical Treatments
Richard N. Gevirtz, Omar M. Alhassoon, and Brian P. Miller
Chapter 2 . Crisis Interventions
Richard K. James
Chapter 2 . Community Intervention
Edison J. Trickett and Dina Birman
Chapter 22. Self-Help Programs
Forrest Scogin and Elizabeth A. DiNapoli
Chapter 23. Positive Psychological Interventions
Acacia C. Parks and Kristin Layous
Chapter 24.Telepsychology and eHealth
Heleen Riper and Pim J. Cuijpers
Part III. Prevention
Chapter 25. Prevention of Mental Disorders
J. Gayle Beck and Meghan W. Cody
Chapter 2 . Prevention of Substance Abuse
Gilbert J. Botvin and Kenneth W. Griffin
Chapter 27. Prevention of Interpersonal Violence
Sherry Hamby, Victoria Banyard, and John Grych
Part IV. Other Professional Activities
Chapter 28. Consultation
Richard R. Kilburg
Chapter 29. Administration
Jane S. Halonen
Chapter 3 . Teaching
Kathi A. Borden and E. John McIlvried
Chapter 3 . Advocacy
Brian N. Baird and Michael J. Sullivan
Chapter 32. Public Policy
Stephanie A. Reid-Arndt, Sandra Wilkniss, Patrick H. DeLeon, and
Robert G. Frank
Index
Volume 4. Psychopathology and Health
Editorial Board
Contributors
Volume Introduction
Part I. Diagnosis and Classification
Chapter . Classification of Mental and Behavioral Disorders
Geoffrey M. Reed, Rebeca Robles, and Tecelli Dom amp iacute
nguez-Mart amp iacute nez
Part II. Psychological Disorders
Chapter 2. Mood Disorders
Robert J. DeRubeis, Daniel R. Strunk, and Lorenzo
Lorenzo-Luaces
Chapter 3. Anxiety Disorders
Dean McKay
Chapter 4. Stress and Trauma Disorders
Nnamdi Pole, Laurie Fields, and Wendy D'Andrea
Chapter 5. Child and Adolescent Disorders
Theodore P. Beauchaine and Elizabeth P. Hayden
Chapter . Personality Disorders
Kenneth N. Levy and Benjamin N. Johnson
Chapter 7. Somatic Disorders
Donald D. McGeary, Meredith M. Hartzell, Cindy A. McGeary, and
Robert J. Gatchel
Chapter 8. Schizophrenia Disorders
Kim T. Mueser and David Roe
Chapter 9. Neurocognitive Disorders
Mary Guerriero Austrom, Courtney B. Johnson, Daniel F. Rexroth, and
Frederick W. Unverzagt
Part III. Health and Relational Disorders
Chapter . Eating Disorders
Eric Stice, Paul Rohde, and Heather Shaw
Chapter . Substance Use Disorders
Peter E. Nathan, Joan E. Zweben, and Richard A. Rawson
Chapter 2. Gambling and Impulse Control Disorders
Nancy M. Petry, Leonardo F. Andrade, Sheila M. Alessi, and Carla J.
Rash
Chapter 3. Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities
Johannes Rojahn, Kristen Medeiros, and Cristan A. Farmer
Chapter 4. Sleep Disorders
Rachel Manber, Allison Siebern, Norah Simpson, and Britney
Blair
Chapter 5. Sexual Disorders
Peggy J. Kleinplatz
Chapter . Gender Dysphoria
Peggy T. Cohen-Kettenis and Thomas D. Steensma
Chapter 7. Family and Relational Disorders
Jacob Z. Goldsmith, William M. Pinsof, Jay L. Lebow, and Anthony L.
Chambers
Chapter 8. Health Problems
Ronald H. Rozensky, Steven M. Tovian, and Carol D. Goodheart
Part IV. Promoting Health
Chapter 9. Problem Solving
Arthur M. Nezu and Christine Maguth Nezu
Chapter 2 . Stress Management
Sharon Glazer and Courtney E. Gasser
Chapter 2 . Coping With Life Transitions
Thomas W. Miller
Chapter 22. Parent Training
Christie Pugh Karpiak and Thomas J. Dishion
Chapter 23. Resilience Interventions
Mary Karapetian Alvord, Brendan A. Rich, and Lisa H. Berghorst
Chapter 24. Weight Loss and Exercise
Craig A. Johnson, Jennette P. Moreno, and John P. Foreyt
Chapter 25. Smoking Cessation
Deborah M. Scharf, Stuart G. Ferguson, Hilary Tindle, and Saul
Shiffman
Chapter 2 . Improving Adherance to Health Regimens
Summer L. Williams, Kelly B. Haskard-Zolnierek, and M. Robin
DiMatteo
Chapter 27. Coping With Death and Dying
Camille B. Wortman
Chapter 28. Promoting Diversity and Inclusiveness
John F. Dovidio, Louis A. Penner, and John E. Pachankis
Chapter 29. Coping With Disasters
Roxane Cohen Silver and Dana Rose Garfin
Index
Volume 5. Education and Profession
Editorial Board
Contributors
Volume Introduction
Part I. Educational Paths
Chapter . Undergraduate Exposure to Clinical Psychology
Janet R. Matthews and Catherine M. Lee
Chapter 2. Master's Training in Clinical Psychology
Andrew M. Pomerantz and Jason M. Murphy
Chapter 3. PhD Training in Clinical Psychology
Elizabeth A. Klonoff
Chapter 4. PsyD Training in Clinical Psychology
George Stricker
Chapter 5. Internship Training in Clinical Psychology
Carol Webb and Allison B. Hill
Chapter . Postdoctoral Training in Clinical Psychology
Robert L. Hatcher and Henry A. Buchtel
Chapter 7. Licensing in Psychology
Alex M. Siegel and Stephen T. DeMers
Chapter 8. Advanced Credentialing in Clinical Psychology
Judy E. Hall and David R. Cox
Chapter 9. Continuing Education and Lifelong Learning
Jennifer M. Taylor and Greg J. Neimeyer
Chapter . Interprofessional Education and Training
Cynthia D. Belar
Chapter . Educational Paths Around the World
Ingrid Lunt and Judy E. Hall
Part II. Developing the Psychologist
Chapter 2. Clinical Supervision
Edward P. Shafranske and Carol A. Falender
Chapter 3. Peer Supervision and Support
Sheetal Shah and Emil Rodolfa
Chapter 4. Self-Care for Psychologists
Erica H. Wise and Jeffrey E. Barnett
Chapter 5. Professional Development and Personal Therapy
Michael Helge R amp oslash nnestad, David E. Orlinsky, and Hadas
Wiseman
Chapter . Building and Managing a Private Practice
Steven Walfish, Jeffrey Zimmerman, and Katherine C. Nordal
Chapter 7. Learning From Practice and Patients
Jacqueline B. Persons, Janie J. Hong, Polina Eidelman, and Daniela
J. Owen
Chapter 8. Learning From Research
James F. Boswell and R. Kathryn McHugh
Chapter 9. Career Development for Psychologists
John C. Linton
Part III. Ethics and Standards
Chapter 2 . Professional Ethics in the United States
Gerald P. Koocher and Linda F. Campbell
Chapter 2 . Professional Ethics Around the World
Mark M. Leach
Chapter 22. Professional Standards and Guidelines
Lynn F. Bufka and Raquel Halfond
Chapter 23. Legal and Statutory Regulations
Stephen T. DeMers and Alex M. Siegel
Chapter 24. Malpractice and Risk Management
Jeffrey N. Younggren, Eric A. Harris, and Jana N. Martin
Chapter 25. Major Training Conferences in Clinical Psychology
Catherine L. Grus
Part IV. Professional Organizations
Chapter 2 . Professional Organizations in Clinical Psychology
Gary R. VandenBos, Michi Fu, and Jennifer F. Kelly
Chapter 27. Related Subfields in Psychology
Elena J. Eisman and Caroline Vaile Wright
Chapter 28. Related Mental Health Professions
Thyra A. Fossum, Mary E. Logeais, and William N. Robiner
Part V. Future of Clinical Psychology
Chapter 29. Recent Developments and Future Directions in Clinical
Psychology
John C. Norcross, Gary R. VandenBos, and Donald K. Freedheim
Index
John C. Norcross, PhD, ABPP, is Distinguished Professor of
Psychology at the University of Scranton, Adjunct Professor of
Psychiatry at State University of New York Upstate Medical
University, and a board-certified clinical psychologist. Author of
more than 4 scholarly publications, Dr. Norcross has cowritten or
edited 22 books, most of them in multiple editions. These include
the APA books History of Psychotherapy, Continuity and Change,
Second Edition and Evidence-Based Practices in Mental Health:
Debate and Dialogue on the Fundamental Questions as well as
Psychotherapy Relationships That Work, Psychologists' Desk
Reference, Self-Help That Works, Leaving It at the Office:
Psychotherapist Self-Care, the Insider's Guide to Graduate
Programs in Clinical and Counseling Psychology, and Systems of
Psychotherapy: A Transtheoretical Analysis, now in its 8th edition.
He has also published two self-help books: Changeology and Changing
for Good (with Prochaska and DiClemente). Dr. Norcross has served
as president of the APA Division 2 (Society of Clinical
Psychology), APA Division 29 (Society for the Advancement of
Psychotherapy), the International Society of Clinical Psychology,
and the Society for the Exploration of Psychotherapy Integration.
He has served on the Board of Directors of the National Register of
Health Service Psychologists as well as on APA's governing Council
of Representatives. Dr. Norcross edited the Journal of Clinical
Psychology: In Session for a decade and has been on the editorial
boards of a dozen journals. Dr. Norcross has also been a clinical
and research consultant to a number of organizations, including the
National Institutes of Health and pharmaceutical companies. He has
received multiple professional awards, such as APA's Distinguished
Contributions to Education and Training in Psychology award,
Pennsylvania Professor of the Year from the Carnegie Foundation,
the Rosalee Weiss Award from the American Psychological Foundation,
and election to the National Academies of Practice. An engaging
teacher and clinician, Dr. Norcross has conducted workshops and
lectures in 3 countries. He lives in northeastern Pennsylvania with
his wife, two grown children, and their two new grandkids.
Gary VandenBos, PhD, ABPP, served as the Executive Director
for the Office of Publications and Databases and Publisher for APA.
The Office of Publications and Databases produces more than 9
journals, seven databases, and 8 books per year (under the imprints
APA Books, Magination Press, and APA LifeTools). In addition, the
Office of Publications and Databases produces the APA Psychotherapy
Video Series and the APA Style and reference publications and
products, including the Publication Manual of the American
Psychological Association. In the publishing industry, Dr.
VandenBos has served on the Board of Directors of CrossRef (2 amp
ndash 2 5) and the International Association of Scientific,
Technical, and Medical Publishers (2 7 amp ndash 2 ). Dr. VandenBos
has coauthored, edited, or coedited more than 3 books, including
the History of Psychotherapy, Continuity and Change, Second
Edition, Clinical Geropsychology, and the award-winning
Psychotherapy of Schizophrenia: Treatment of Choice. He has also
written more than 4 book chapters and published more than
peer-reviewed articles. He is the editor-in-chief of the
award-winning APA Dictionary of Psychology, Second Edition and APA
Dictionary of Clinical Psychology and was the managing editor of
the American Psychologist, APA's flagship journal, and
Psychological Services, as well as coeditor for APA's first
open-methodology, collaborative data-sharing, open access journal,
the Archives of Scientific Psychology. Dr. VandenBos began his
career as the research coordinator of the Michigan State
Psychotherapy With Schizophrenics Research Project he then served
as the director of the Howell-Area Community Mental Health Center
in Howell, Michigan. He was the first director of the APA Office of
National Policy Studies. He held a position as professor of
clinical psychology at the University of Bergen (Norway) from 982
through 2 3. Dr. VandenBos has maintained a clinical practice since
974, during which time he has also functioned as a consultant to
various professional organizations on subjects such as crisis
intervention, child abuse, family stress, schizophrenia, and
violent individuals. He received the Early Career Award for
Contribution to Psychotherapy from APA Division 29 (Society for the
Advancement of Psychotherapy) and is an APA fellow and a diplomate
of the American Board of Forensic Psychology.
Donald K. Freedheim, PhD is Professor Emeritus of Psychology
at Case Western Reserve University. He earned his doctoral degree
at Duke University and completed his internship at Boston
Children's Medical Center. He was chief psychologist at the Mental
Development Center at Case Western Reserve University before
joining the department full-time in 97 . He was a visiting
professor at Tel Aviv University in 975 amp ndash 97 . He is past
president of APA Division 29 (Society for the Advancement of
Psychotherapy), and served on the APA Council of Representatives
and the Board of Directors. In 992, Dr. Freedheim edited the first
edition of History of Psychotherapy: A Century of Change in honor
of the APA centennial and was coeditor (with Norcross and
VandenBos) of the second edition (2 ). He and the current coeditors
originated the popular APA Psychotherapy Video Series, and he was
the therapist for the recent release, Short-Term Dynamic
Psychotherapy. Dr. Freedheim also edited the first and second
editions of History of Psychology and the first volume of the
Handbook of Psychology (2 3 and 2 3) and also coedited The Clinical
Child Documentation Sourcebook ( 999). For years, he edited the
journal Psychotherapy and was the founding editor of The Clinical
Psychologist, the bulletin of APA Division 2 (Society of Clinical
Psychology), and of the APA journal Professional Psychology. He
served as president of the Cleveland and Ohio Psychological
Associations and is a Distinguished Practitioner of the National
Academies of Practice. Currently, Dr. Freedheim serves on the
Trauma Response Team of the Cleveland Chapter of the American Red
Cross.
There are now many handbooks of clinical psychology amp hellip A few distinct features make the APA volumes stand out from the pack. First, there is the remarkable coverage amp hellip Second, the organization, structure, and strong editorial leadership bring a uniformity that goes beyond format and style. Interchapter consistency gives the overall product a level of excellence that rises well above the competitors with which I am familiar. Finally, the set has the imprimatur and reflects the huge influence of the APA. (PsycCRITIQUES)
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