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TABLE OF CONTENTS: Part 1: Can I Run My Practice without Managed Care? 1 Saying Goodbye to managed Care: How You Can Do It. 2 Are You a New Professional or Graduate Student or Are You New to Private-Pay Practice? 3 Fast-Food Psychotherapy. Part 2: All About Money. 4 Money Matters. 5 How to Ask for Money and How to Get It. Part III: Carving Your Niche and Marketing Your Services. 6 Watch Your Language! 7 Are You a Generalist, Specialist, or Both? 8 Your Path to Success: The Gold Standard. 9 Value-Added Services: Why Other Professionals Need Psychotherapists. 10 It Is Moral to Market. Part IV: Basic Tools of the Trade. 11 Stationery and Business Cards. 12 Flyers, Newsletters, Fact Sheets, and ...
Psychotherapy is an increasingly stressful profession. Yet therapists spend most of their time helping clients deal with their stress, not caring for their own. This book is designed as a tool for the experienced counselor, junior therapist, and graduate student, as the issues confronted and discussed herein are relevant to anyone in the field, regardless of experience or expertise. Dr. Weiss has written a book in an easy, conversational tone, filled with concrete examples and blending research findings, clinical experience and theoretical approaches into practical suggestions and sound advice. The book is divided into three parts, discussing therapist concerns and questions that are continually raised, and providing practical tools based on clinical experience and research findings. It will be useful to all mental health professionals who have felt the strain of their practice.
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Endangered Private Practice explains how private practices are being absorbed by the current health care reform movement as a way to control costs, limit access, decrease disparities, and increase quality of care. This is the story of a fading art being squashed by the interests of business and politics. Also shared are many of the providers’ concerns and fears for the future of medical and mental health care services.
The papers in this volume explore biological explanations for criminal behavior, the major theories supporting sociobiology, as well as those that challenge it.