Clicky

APA ONLINE HOME SITE MAP CONTACT PUBLICATIONS HOME APA BOOKS CHILDREN'S BOOKS DATABASES JOURNALS SOFTWARE VIDEOS
APA BOOKS
top of search box
spacer spacer
spacer
spacer
spacer  spacer
spacer APA BOOKS
spacer New Releases
spacer Coming Soon
spacer Bestsellers
spacer By Author
spacer By Subject
spacer By Title
spacer APA Style Products
spacer LifeTools: Books for the General Public
spacer Course Adoptions & Textbooks
spacer Continuing Education Books
spacer Information for Authors
spacer Ordering Information
spacer Returns Policy
spacer Copyright and Permissions
spacer View the 2009 Books Catalog (PDF: 3.64MB)
spacer
Contact APA Books
SPACER TOP NAVIGATION BAR

Healing Trauma: The Power of Group Treatment for People With Intellectual Disabilities
Nancy J. Razza, PhD, CGP and Daniel J. Tomasulo, PhD, TEP, CGP

BOOK COVER SPACER

LIST PRICE: $49.95
MEMBER/AFFILIATE PRICE: $39.95

227 pages
ITEM #: 4317054
ISBN: 1-59147-160-5
ISBN 13: 978-1-59147-160-8
PUBLICATION DATE: August 2004
EDITION: Hardcover

View the Table of Contents

SPACER
YOUR SHOPPING CART
TOP OF SHOPPING CART BOX
ADD TO CART
VIEW CART
CHECK OUT
SPACER

Copyright and Permissions

Request permission to reuse material from this book.

Healing Trauma: The Power of Group Treatment for People With Intellectual Disabilities is a compassionate, informative guide to group therapy for an often-neglected population. People with intellectual disabilities suffer higher than average rates of trauma, sexual abuse, and psychopathology, but many formidable obstacles have impeded accurate diagnoses and treatments for members of this population. Razza and Tomasulo maintain that the need for psychotherapy for people with both intellectual and psychiatric disorders can no longer be ignored, and devote this volume to building a clear foundation for determining treatments of choice for patients with intellectual disabilities.

Choosing group treatment as the most effective intervention, the authors describe interactive-behavioral therapy (IBT), based heavily on traditional models of group therapy and psychodrama, and modified to enhance the possibility for change in people with intellectual disabilities. In IBT, member-to-member interactions are regarded as a priority for learning, as the group therapy format allows for a controlled connection with others in which each individual's style of interrelating can be examined and altered. The authors describe IBT sessions with great clarity, detailing each stage and task of the process, and reporting on various therapeutic factors that emerge during group therapy.

The special considerations and needs of group treatment for trauma and sexual abuse survivors and offenders with intellectual disabilities are covered in equal measure, and information is offered about how the application of the interactive-behavioral model can be used in sexual abuse avoidance training. A related model of individual treatment is detailed along with ways in which the clinician can make informed decisions concerning the most effective course of treatment for a given individual outside of group treatment.

In heartfelt and instructive language, the authors make an effective case for the powerful gains that can be attained by psychotherapy for people with intellectual disabilities, and this book will be an invaluable research for clinicians and other helping professionals who work with them.

Book Review

Read a review of this title from the PsycCRITIQUES database (PDF: 45KB)

Purchase access to PsycCRITIQUES, APA's searchable database of book reviews in psychology, delivering approximately 20 current reviews each week. More information.

SPACER