[Audio and Video] Dr. Erickson’s Approaches to Cancer Pain (No CE Credit)
Salepage : [Audio and Video] Dr. Erickson’s Approaches to Cancer Pain (No CE Credit)
Archive : [Audio and Video] Dr. Erickson’s Approaches to Cancer Pain (No CE Credit) Digital Download
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- Subject Matter: Pain
Erickson Materials | Milton H. Erickson Collections | Erickson Streaming Video Collection
Course Levels: Master Degree or Higher in a Health-Related Field Faculty: Milton H. Erickson MD, MD | Jeffrey Zeig, PhD
Original Program Date: May 07, 2020 Duration: 1 hour Format: Audio and Video
DescriptionDescription:
This video focuses on Milton Erickson’s methods to pain management, especially cancer pain management.
Milton Erickson was essentially a communicator of ideas. He would occasionally convey information, but most of the time he would explain a notion through experiential means. He would also regularly employ multilayer communication: on a social level, casually discussing something, but on a psychological level, conveying palliative significance.
This video has three distinct situations, but they all exemplify Erickson’s primary approach of application. Utilization is the cornerstone of all issue solutions, and it is a way of life that was important to Erickson’s life and work as a therapist. He illustrated how whatever was available in the circumstance, as well as whatever the patient offered, might be used to promote the therapy.
Strategic communication is another of Erickson’s core tactics depicted in the video. Strategic communication is a therapeutic technique that involves a number of phases. A therapist should start with an end goal in mind. What do you want to achieve? Then, make a decision on a therapeutic endeavor. Finally, how are you going to attain your goals?
Erickson wrote extensively about the use of hypnosis for pain relief. Perhaps because he suffered chronic pain and was used to developing strategies to control it. Erickson experimented with the approaches he used to aid others. He was a true physician who strove to heal not only himself, but also others.
Handouts
Transcript of Dr. Erickson’s Approaches to Cancer Pain (93.9 KB)
Faculty Milton H. Erickson MD is available after purchase. Seminars and items that are related: 72
Milton H. Erickson, MD, was a psychiatrist in the United States who specialized in medical hypnosis and family therapy. He was the founding president of the American Society for Clinical Hypnosis and was known for his innovative and solution-generating approach to the unconscious mind.
For the most of his life, Dr. Erickson struggled with severe physical disabilities. He developed polio at the age of 17 and was disabled so severely that doctors thought he would die. While recuperating in bed, nearly completely paralyzed and unable to talk, he became acutely aware of the importance of nonverbal communication – body language, tone of voice, and the way these nonverbal signals sometimes directly contradicted the spoken ones. He also began to acquire “body memories” of his own muscle action. By focusing on these memories, he gradually regained control of sections of his body, finally allowing him to speak and move his arms again. His doctor advised him to solely exercise his upper body, so Milton Erickson planned a 1,000-mile canoe expedition to get the strength needed to attend college. His voyage was difficult, and despite the fact that he still did not have full use of his legs at the conclusion, he was able to walk with a cane.In a number of respects, the Ericksonian method differs from standard hypnosis. While the process of hypnosis has traditionally been thought of as the therapist issuing standardized instructions to a passive patient, Ericksonian hypnosis emphasizes the importance of the interactive therapeutic relationship and purposeful engagement of the subject’s inner resources and experiential life. Dr. Erickson transformed the profession of hypnotherapy by introducing various novel concepts and communication patterns into the discipline.
Dr. Erickson’s hypnotic approach informed his unique psychotherapy procedures for treating individuals, couples, and families. Despite his reputation as the world’s premier hypnotist, Dr. Erickson employed formal hypnosis in just one-fifth of his clinical practice cases.
Dr. Erickson was responsible for a significant change in modern psychotherapy. Many formerly deemed severe features of the Ericksonian approach are now absorbed into the mainstream of modern practice.The Erickson Foundation has a biography of Milton Erickson.
Dr. Jeffrey Zeig 303 related lectures and goods
Jeffrey K. Zeig, PhD, is the founder and director of the Milton H. Erickson Foundation, as well as the president of Zeig, Tucker & Theisen, Inc., a behavioral sciences publisher.
He has edited, co-edited, produced, or coauthored more than 20 works on psychotherapy, which have been published in twelve different languages. Dr. Zeig is a private practice psychologist and marital and family therapist in Phoenix, Arizona.
Jeffrey Zeig’s website may be found at Jeffrey Zeig.com.
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