[Audio Only] EP05 Workshop 10 – Showing How Counselors Can Move to a New Leadership Role in Delivering Mental Health Separate from DSM-IV Diagnoses and Brain Drugs – William Glasser, M.D.
Salepage : [Audio Only] EP05 Workshop 10 – Showing How Counselors Can Move to a New Leadership Role in Delivering Mental Health Separate from DSM-IV Diagnoses and Brain Drugs – William Glasser, M.D.
Archive : [Audio Only] EP05 Workshop 10 – Showing How Counselors Can Move to a New Leadership Role in Delivering Mental Health Separate from DSM-IV Diagnoses and Brain Drugs – William Glasser, M.D. Digital Download
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- Workshop Topics: Evolution of Psychotherapy | Evolution of Psychotherapy 2005
William Glasser, MD, is on the faculty.
2 hours and 38 minutes.
Only audio is available in this format.
Original air date: December 7, 2005
DescriptionDescription:
Dr. Glasser has rejected the DSM-IV and the medical model. He does not think any of the mental diseases identified in the DSM-IV exist since none of them are related with brain damage. Using Choice Theory, he has transitioned from the medical school paradigm to the public health model, demonstrating how counselors may provide mental health services more effectively than psychiatrists and at a fraction of the cost.
Objectives of Education:
To explain how mental wellness may exist independently of mental disease.
To describe how the public health or educational paradigm may be used to bring mental health directly to customers.*Content and confidentiality may be modified during sessions*
William Glasser, MD, Professor 45 related seminars and goods
William Glasser, MD, was an American psychiatrist who obtained his MD degree from Case Western Reserve University in 1953. The University of San Francisco bestowed an honorary degree in human letters to William. He was the founder and director of the Institute for Reality Treatment, as well as the author and editor of 10 publications on reality therapy and education. He was also the creator of Choice Theory. His theories, which emphasize human choice, personal responsibility, and personal change, are seen as controversial by orthodox psychiatrists, who prefer to label psychiatric syndromes as “illnesses” and frequently prescribe psychotropic medicines to treat mental problems.
The William Glasser Institute’s profile
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