Cost £95
32 in stock
AETT07
47603
There are no reviews yet.
Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *
Your review *
Name *
Email *
Save my name, email, and website in this browser for the next time I comment.
Join this comprehensive workshop to explore the phenomenology, formulation, and treatment of emetophobia across all age groups. Learn practical strategies, including the vicious flower model and Theory A vs Theory B, to support recovery and improve quality of life for children, young people, and adults.
Register today to gain expert insights and practical tools for identifying, formulating, and treating emetophobia. Empower yourself to make a meaningful difference for individuals and families—secure your spot now!
This workshop will cover the phenomenology, formulation and treatment of emetophobia, across the age range from children / young people into adulthood. The cognitive model of emetophobia will be detailed, with case examples to illustrate the maintenance, using the vicious flower model. Emetophobia is understood to have the highest impact of all specific phobias, being proportionately more likely to result in inpatient admission, especially for children and young people (11.5% compared to 2.4%... READ MORE
Explore a neuropsychological and CBT-based framework to address apathy, fatigue, and poor motivation across mental health conditions. Learn practical strategies to help patients initiate and sustain meaningful change in therapy.
Join this empowering workshop and gain practical tools to help patients overcome barriers and move forward with confidence. Book your place today!
How often is wellbeing compromised because our patients just can’t get going, can’t take that first step. And how often does therapy slow or halt because they struggle to keep going? We see this across disorders: the person with depression who lacks initiation and who suffers from fatigue, the person with anxiety who fears change, the person with an eating disorder who can’t maintain a new regime, the person with ADHD who procrastinates, the person with GAD exhausted by chronic worry. Once... READ MORE
There are no reviews yet.