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Enhancing Treatment Benefits with Exercise - Tg: Component Interventions for Mood, Anxiety, Cognition, and Resilience (Treatments That Work)

Enhancing Treatment Benefits with Exercise - Tg: Component Interventions for Mood, Anxiety, Cognition, and Resilience (Treatments That Work)

Current price: $49.95
Publication Date: September 3rd, 2024
Publisher:
Oxford University Press, USA
ISBN:
9780190946500
Pages:
120
Available for Preorder

Description

Exercise has powerful effects on mental health. This therapist guide, and the accompanying workbook, provide an indispensable resource for practitioners who wish to expand their therapeutic range to include exercise-based interventions. A wealth of data shows the efficacy of these interventions for the treatment of mood and anxiety disorders, cognitive enhancement, and resilience training, including resilience training applied to the control of habit disorders like smoking. This therapist guide provides a step-by-step accounting of the benefits of exercise, the application of exercise to specific conditions, recommended exercise dose and durations, and, perhaps most importantly, motivational strategies to help clients get to and succeed with exercise.

Fully revised and updated to capture the latest research in the area, this new edition also expands the content of the first edition to cover exercise for cognition, resilience, and smoking. Introductory chapters provide general guidance on strategies for initiating and maintaining exercise and are complemented by chapters devoted to the specific application of exercise to mood disorders, anxiety disorders, the enhancement of cognition, and for general resilience as might be applied in a relapse-prevention phase of treatment.

About the Author

Jasper A. J. Smits, PhD, is Professor of Psychology and Director of the Anxiety & Health Behaviors Laboratory at the University of Texas at Austin. He specializes in the development and evaluation of behavioral interventions for anxiety and related disorders. With respect to exercise, he has been involved in research testing whether aerobic training can provide learning experiences (e.g., feeling safe around bodily sensations, reappraisal of stressors) essential to attaining patients' treatment goals. Following up on initial successes in this area among adults with anxiety motivated to quit smoking, he has developed a YMCA exercise-based smoking cessation intervention that is currently undergoing evaluation. Dr. Smits has authored over 250 publications, frequently provides workshops on exercise for mental health, and maintains an active private practice. Michael W. Otto, PhD, is Professor in the Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences and Director of the Translational Research Laboratory at Boston University. He has had a major career focus on developing and validating new psychosocial treatments, with a focus on treatment refractory populations including those with mood, anxiety, and substance use disorders. His work includes a translational research agenda investigating brain-behavior relationships in therapeutic learning. Dr. Otto's focus on hard-to-treat conditions and principles underlying behavior-change failures led him to an additional focus on health-behavior promotion, including investigations of addictive behaviors, medication adherence, sleep, and exercise. Dr. Otto has published over 475 articles and 20 books spanning his research interests, and he was identified as a "top producer" in the clinical empirical literature as well as an ISI Highly Cited Researcher. He received the APA Society of Clinical Psychology award for Distinguished Scientific Contributions to Clinical Psychology, the Elizabeth Hurlock Beckman Award from the American Psychological Association for Mentoring, and the Toy Caldwell-Colbert Award for Distinguished Educator in Clinical Psychology. His leadership positions include serving as President of the Association of Behavioral and Cognitive Therapies, and President of Division 12 of the American Psychological Association.