Order Number |
636738393092 |
Type of Project |
ESSAY |
Writer Level |
PHD VERIFIED |
Format |
APA |
Academic Sources |
10 |
Page Count |
3-12 PAGES |
Discussion Thread: Community OR Childhood Trauma
In light of our readings and presentations in Module 5: Week 5 and Module 6: Week 6, respond to ONE of the following:
Discuss the role community plays in the recovery of the addict and his/her family.
Describe similarities and differences between pastors and health-care professionals struggling with sex addiction.
Discuss the effects of childhood trauma on the desires of the heart, as discussed by Laaser and other sources studied in the course thus far.
First-person point of view is acceptable in the discussions.
Please review the Discussion Assignment Instructions Download Discussion Assignment Instructionsprior to posting. You may also click the three dots in the upper corner to Show Rubric.
Carnes, P. J. & Adams, K. M. (2020). Clinical management of sex addiction. (2nd ed.). Routledge
Laaser, M. R. (2004). Healing the wounds of sexual addiction. Zondervan.
ABSTRACT
Clinical Management of Sex Addiction’s newest edition updates many of the original chapters from 28 leaders in the field with new findings and treatment methods in the field of sex addiction.
With a growing awareness of sex addiction as a problem, plus the advent of cybersex compulsion, professional clinicians are being confronted with sexual compulsion with little clinical or academic preparation. This is the first book distilling the experience of the leaders in this emerging field. It additionally provides new chapters on emerging areas of interest, including partner counseling, trauma and sexual addiction, and adolescent sex addiction.
With a focus on special populations, the book creates a current and coherent reference for the therapist who faces quickly escalating new constellations of addictive sexual behavior. Readable, concise and filled with useful interventions, it is a key text for professionals new to the field and a classic reference for all clinicians who treat sex addiction.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Chapter|5 pages
DOWNLOADSize: 0.56 MB
Part I|120 pages
The Early Stages
Chapter 1|12 pages
ByBonnie Phillips, Patrick J. Carnes, Kenneth M. Adams
Abstract
DOWNLOADSize: 0.59 MB
Chapter 2|19 pages
The Sexual Addiction Screening Process
ByPatrick J. Carnes
Abstract
DOWNLOADSize: 0.66 MB
Chapter 3|18 pages
ByBradley A. Green, Randolph C. Arnau, Patrick J. Carnes, Stefanie Carnes
Abstract
DOWNLOADSize: 0.69 MB
Chapter 4|30 pages
Clinical Management of Defense Mechanisms in Sex Addiction
ByIsabel Nino de Guzman, Monica Meyer
Abstract
DOWNLOADSize: 0.70 MB
Chapter 5|13 pages
ByNina Laltrello
Abstract
DOWNLOADSize: 0.61 MB
Chapter 6|26 pages
A Collaborative Model for Couples in Sex Addiction Recovery
ByKenneth M. Adams, Pat Love, MaryJane Wilt
Abstract
DOWNLOADSIZE: 1.19 MB
Part II|130 pages
Treatment and Therapy
Chapter 7|21 pages
Shame Reduction, Affect Regulation and Sexual Boundary Development
ByKenneth M. Adams
Abstract
DOWNLOADSize: 0.85 MB
Chapter 8|14 pages
ByMark F. Schwartz, Stephen Southern
Abstract
DOWNLOADSize: 0.62 MB
Chapter 9|17 pages
How a Little Neurobiology Lets Us Identify and Treat Sex Addiction
ByAlexandra Katehakis
Abstract
DOWNLOADSize: 0.63 MB
Chapter 10|15 pages
Clinical Boundary Issues with Sexually Addicted Clients
ByTimothy Tays, Brenda Garrett, Ralph Earle
Abstract
DOWNLOADSIZE: 0.61 MB
Chapter 11|25 pages
Integrating 12-step Recovery in Clinical Treatment of Sex Addiction
A Practical Guide for the Clinician
ByJoel D. Ziff
Abstract
DOWNLOADSize: 0.67 MB
Chapter 12|11 pages
INTEGRATING THE 12 STEPS IN COUPLE’S RECOVERY FROM SEXUAL ADDICTION
ByMark R. Laaser, Debbie Laaser
Abstract
DOWNLOADSize: 0.60 MB
Chapter 13|25 pages
Disclosure of Extra-relational Sexual Activities by Persons with Sexual Addiction
Initial Disclosure, Disclosure of Relapse and Impact on the Relationship, Partner and Children
ByJennifer P. Schneider, M. Deborah Corley
Abstract
DOWNLOADSize: 0.67 MB
Part III|198 pages
Special Populations
Chapter 14|11 pages
Children of Sex AddictsThe Forgotten Victims
ByStefanie Carnes
Abstract
DOWNLOADSize: 0.60 MB
Chapter 15|13 pages
Cybersex AddictionAnticipating the Tsunami
ByPatrick J. Carnes
Abstract
DOWNLOADSize: 0.66 MB
Chapter 16|17 pages
ByMarie Wilson
Abstract
DOWNLOADSize: 2.76 MB
CHAPTER 17|18 PAGES
The Value of Group Psychotherapy for Sexual Addicts
ByAlyson Nerenberg
Abstract
DOWNLOADSize: 0.63 MB
Chapter 18|18 pages
Psychopharmacologic Intervention Sex Addiction
A Psychiatrist’s Perspective on the Diagnosis, Neuroscientific Theories and Treatment
ByKenneth Paul Rosenberg, Suzanne O’Connor
Abstract
DOWNLOADSize: 0.63 MB
Chapter 19|16 pages
Treating Female Sex and Love Addicts
ByMarnie C. Ferree
Abstract
DOWNLOADSize: 0.63 MB
Chapter 20|25 pages
Dysfunctional Sexual Behavior in Borderline Women
Impulsive Sexual Acting-Out or Sexual Addiction/Compulsivity?
ByShannae Anderson, Mark R. Laaser
Abstract
DOWNLOADSize: 0.73 MB
Chapter 21|13 pages
BYMARK R. LAASER, KENNETH M. ADAMS
Abstract
DOWNLOADSize: 0.61 MB
Chapter 22|19 pages
Addiction in Health-Care Providers
ByRichard R. Irons, Raju Hajela
Abstract
DOWNLOADSize: 0.63 MB
Chapter 23|14 pages
The Homeless and Sex Addiction
ByKen McGill
Abstract
DOWNLOADSize: 0.61 MB
Chapter 24|15 pages
Treatment Concerns for Gay Male Sex Addicts (2015 Edition)
ByRobert Weiss
Abstract
DOWNLOADSize: 0.62 MB
Chapter 25|17 pages
The Sex Addicted Adolescent Client
ByRichard Boggs
Abstract
DOWNLOADSize: 1.11 MB
Part IV|69 pages
Clinical Practice and Resources
CHAPTER 26|24 PAGES
The Treatment of Sex Offenders Using a Task Centered Approach
ByBarbara Levinson
Abstract
DOWNLOADSize: 0.64 MB
Chapter 27|28 pages
Sex Addiction as a DiseaseEvidence for Assessment, Diagnosis and Response to Critics
ByBonnie Phillips, Raju Hajela, Donald L. Hilton
Abstract
DOWNLOADSize: 0.70 MB
Chapter 28|15 pages
Long-term Management of Sex Addiction
ByBonnie Phillips
Abstract
DOWNLOADSize: 0.63 MB
Professional Plagiarism Free Paper in APA/MLA/Harvard/Turabian Format, Instant Delivery, High Quality Submissions, 100% Unique, Turnitin Report Attached
RUBRIC | |||
Excellent Quality
95-100%
|
Introduction
45-41 points The context and relevance of the issue, as well as a clear description of the study aim, are presented. The history of searches is discussed. |
Literature Support
91-84 points The context and relevance of the issue, as well as a clear description of the study aim, are presented. The history of searches is discussed. |
Methodology
58-53 points With titles for each slide as well as bulleted sections to group relevant information as required, the content is well-organized. Excellent use of typeface, color, images, effects, and so on to improve readability and presenting content. The minimum length criterion of 10 slides/pages is reached. |
Average Score
50-85% |
40-38 points
More depth/information is required for the context and importance, otherwise the study detail will be unclear. There is no search history information supplied. |
83-76 points
There is a review of important theoretical literature, however there is limited integration of research into problem-related ideas. The review is just partly focused and arranged. There is research that both supports and opposes. A summary of the material given is provided. The conclusion may or may not include a biblical integration. |
52-49 points
The content is somewhat ordered, but there is no discernible organization. The use of typeface, color, graphics, effects, and so on may sometimes distract from the presenting substance. It is possible that the length criteria will not be reached. |
Poor Quality
0-45% |
37-1 points
The context and/or importance are lacking. There is no search history information supplied. |
75-1 points
There has been an examination of relevant theoretical literature, but still no research concerning problem-related concepts has been synthesized. The review is just somewhat focused and organized. The provided overview of content does not include any supporting or opposing research. The conclusion has no scriptural references. |
48-1 points
There is no logical or apparent organizational structure. There is no discernible logical sequence. The use of typeface, color, graphics, effects, and so on often detracts from the presenting substance. It is possible that the length criteria will not be reached. |
Place the Order Here: https://standardwriter.com/orders/ordernow / https://standardwriter.com/