Psychotherapy Networker
iPlaybackNETWORKER Events Presenters Topics Help
Home
Symposium  East 2008
Speakers
Workshops
Registration
Full Program
Follow-Up (East)
CE Certificates (East)
Symposium CDs (East)
Symposium West 2006

All Topics
Abuse
AD/HD
Addictions
Adolescents
Adoption
Adulthood
Affairs
African Americans
Aging
Anger

Anxiety


Part I: The Anxious Brain

Session #: 718-424
Presenter(s): Margaret Wehrenberg
Session Length: 2 hr. 00 min.
Event: 2008 Networker Annual Symposium
Date: March 13-16, 2008

Purchase Media - Session #: 718-424
Description Price Qty. Cart
 CD $16.95 buy now  
 MP3 $16.95 buy now  
 iPod Audio $16.95 buy now  
 DOWNLOAD iTUNES FILE - Part I: The Anxious Brain $16.95
buy now  

Understanding the relationship between how the brain functions and how people experience different sorts of anxiety can have profound implications for treatment. In this workshop, we'll describe the neurobiology of three different anxiety states—panic, general anxiety, and social anxiety—and what clinical interventions best suit the brain structures and processes underlying them. You'll learn not only how to understand the neurobiology of anxiety, but how to clearly convey this material to your clients, which itself has a calming effect. You'll come away with a key to identifying the most effective methods—behavioral and cognitive methods, as well as physiological and body-mind approaches like muscle relaxation, mindfulness training, and focusing—that best match a client's specific form of anxiety and its neurobiological base. (This session will continue with Workshop 524.)



About     |   Contact Us  |  FAQ  |  Order Process   |   Privacy Policy  |  Shipping Policy  |  Your Account  |  Login  |  View Cart
© Copyright 2005 iPlayback. All Rights Reserved.
Developed in and hosted by CommerceV3.