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

Cognition and Suicide: Theory, Research, and Therapy
Edited by Thomas E. Ellis

BOOK COVER SPACER

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

409 pages
ITEM #: 4317097
ISBN: 1-59147-357-8
ISBN 13: 978-1-59147-357-2
PUBLICATION DATE: January 2006
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.

Cognitive-behavior therapy (CBT) leads the field of psychotherapy in the evidence-based study and treatment of many psychological disorders. However, CBT has been less prominently applied to the study and prevention of suicidal behaviors. This volume is a compilation of theory, research, and intervention practices focused on cognition and suicide. It brings together for the first time many of the world's leading authorities, who seek to answer such questions as, "How is the thinking of suicidal individuals different from nonsuicidal individuals?" "What cognitive vulnerabilities place an individual at risk for developing suicidal ideation and behavior when stressed?" "How does what we know of the thinking of suicidal people translate into cognitive-behavioral treatment strategies?"

Each contributor discusses a particular theoretical and/or research framework, often with specific guidelines for clinical intervention tailored to specific cognitive vulnerabilities exhibited by suicidal patients. All of the major CBT theoretical systems are represented, including Aaron Beck's Cognitive Therapy, Albert Ellis's Rational-Emotive Behavior Therapy, and Marsha Linehan's Dialectical Behavior Therapy. Specific empirically-derived cognitive features are also addressed, such as deficient problem-solving skills, perfectionism, negative body image, and overgeneral autobiographical memory.

Implications for understanding and intervening with suicidal individuals are profound—suicidal thought processes are viewed here as causal (as opposed to merely correlated) factors in suicidality. Such thoughts, perhaps for the first time, begin to be viewed, not only as part of the problem, but as part of a potential solution.

Book Review

Read a review of this title from the PsycCRITIQUES database (PDF: 39KB)

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

  • About the Editor
  • SPACER