4 results match your criteria: "The Fielding Institute[Affiliation]"
Prof Psychol Res Pr
October 1999
The Fielding Institute, 2028 Evergreen Drive, Fort Collins, Colorado 80521, USA.
At one time or another, we all have encountered cases with serious ethical and legal implications. How can we know that we have thoroughly explored every facet of these dilemmas? The authors present a 7-category matrix of the following considerations: moral principles and personal values, clinical and cultural considerations, ethics codes, agency or employer policies, statues, rules and regulations, and case law. Two clinical examples illustrate the usefulness of this multidimensional framework for professional psychologists.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Clin Exp Neuropsychol
February 2000
Department of Neurology, NYU Medical Center, The Fielding Institute, New York, NY, USA.
Existing neuropsychological procedures assess veridical, but not adaptive, decision making, which are based on different mechanisms. This severely curtails the tests' ecological validity, because most real-life decision making situations are adaptive, rather than veridical. Veridical decision making entails finding the correct response intrinsic to external situations and is actor-independent.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPain
July 1995
Children's Hospital of Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA 90064 USA University of Southern California School of Medicine, Los Angeles, CA 90064 USA Department of Psychology, The Fielding Institute, Santa Barbara, CA, USA.
A treatment outcome study was conducted to compare the efficacy of cognitive behavior therapy (CBT) versus general anesthesia in alleviating the distress of 18 pediatric cancer patients (ages: 3-12 years) undergoing bone marrow aspirations (BMAs). CBT and short-acting mask anesthesia were delivered within a repeated-measures counterbalance design. Results indicated that children exhibited more behavioral distress in the CBT condition for the 1st minute lying down on the treatment table.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Group Psychother
October 1992
The Fielding Institute, Santa Barbara, CA.
In response to Martin Lakin's (1991) IJGP article, "Some Ethical Issues in Feminist-Oriented Therapy Groups for Women," this article examines recent developments in feminist theory and proposes that a feminist perspective is both ethical and can make significant contributions to the practice of group psychotherapy. The overview of feminist theory focuses on (1) the importance of the social context, (2) contributions and challenges to psychoanalytic and developmental theory, (3) attention to power relations, (4) the connection between the personal and political, and (5) recognition and integration of diversity and difference. Clinical examples illustrate ways in which male and female group therapists can take a feminist perspective and become "ethical advocates.
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