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Understanding the cycle Diploma linked
of depression
vital information
lineA one-day course with tutor: Joe Griffin

Course outline:
Joe Griffin’s iconoclastic training day shatters the many myths about depression and how best to treat it.

Despite enormous efforts to improve the nation's mental health, the number of people suffering from depression is still rising (and increasingly so among children, young people and the elderly). Millions are affected in some way – yet it is actually one of the most treatable disorders health professionals are asked to help with, as this inspiring training day shows.

Find out why depressed people are always so tired and unmotivated and why
the appropriate psychotherapy has a dramatically lower rate of relapse than antidepressants and is the most effective treatment, even with severe cases.


  What you will gain from the day:
Essential information about why people become depressed
A better understanding of what depression really is, why it’s on the increase and how to diagnose it
Practical help to quickly break patterns of depression, move people on and prevent relapse
New insights into the dissociative elements of depressive lifestyles
Techniques for tackling rigid thinking and negative expectancy
Ways to talk to suicidal people – this training saves lives.

 

  Who should attend?
All health and welfare professionals: if you have to deal with, treat or care for depressed people, and wish to be more effective, this training is for you.
If you need to deepen your understanding for personal reasons, or if you live
or work with a depressed person, this training is for you.
If you are curious about more effective and rapid ways to reduce misery and improve psychotherapy outcomes, this training is for you.


line

Course programme:

Registration: 8.30am to 9.30am (Tea or coffee served until 9.25am)

9.30am – Why depression is on the increase
Despite the increasing attention given to mental health, depression still affects millions of lives at great cost to society. Find out how to quickly spot the symptoms of depression. What causes it – cultural, family and individual influences – and
why it now seems an inevitable part of modern life. Why the 'disease' model of depression is not appropriate. The use of anti-depressant drugs and their dangerous side effects. The research that shows why depression is not a biological illness and why an exclusively biological approach to diagnosis and treatment is mostly anti-therapeutic. Suicide and self-harm – risk factors and management.

11.00am — Tea/coffee

11.30am – The cycle of depression
Why women suffer more depression than men and, statistically, take twice as long to recover. How this discovery produced more effective treatment. Why some common psychotherapeutic strategies make matters worse for depressed people. How depression is learned. Why depression appears in many different forms. The newly discovered links between emotional arousal, REM sleep, dreaming and depression. The connection between anger, guilt and depression. Understanding how depression is an emotion that invades all dimensions of a person’s life including physiology, thought patterns, relationships, attitude to work and emotional behaviour. Depression as a symptomatic trance that can be interrupted.

1.00pm – Lunch

2.00pm – Effective treatment strategies
Three brief therapy techniques that reliably interrupt the ongoing pattern of a depressed person’s experience. How to calm anxiety quickly, promoting optimism by challenging negative self suggestions and dissolving negative trance states. Identifying patients’ missing skills. Helping people to externalise their problems and be more flexible. The importance of ‘sequencing’. Stimulating positive new patterns through experience. Depression, dying and death.

3.00pm — Tea/coffee

3.30pm – Postnatal depression and managing bipolar disorder
Factors that lead to postnatal depression and how we can effectively treat it. Managing bipolar disorder by psychological means. Summary of the day.

4.30pm — Day ends

 

DUBLIN:* Date: Tuesday 11th September 2012
Venue: Marino Institute of Education
Times: Each day starts at 9.30am and ends at 4.30pm
Course Code: DN08


BRISTOL: Date: Tuesday 16th October 2012
Venue: Clifton Hill House, University of Bristol
Times: Each day starts at 9.30am and ends at 4.30pm
Course Code: DN09


LONDON: Date: Wednesday 21st November 2012
Venue: Friends House Quaker Meeting Centre
Times: Each day starts at 9.30am and ends at 4.30pm
Course Code: DN10


PRICE: £160 plus vat (£192) per person. Fee includes tuition, course notes, attendance certificate, lunch and refreshments


*Dublin price: £175 per person. Fee includes tuition, course notes, attendance certificate, lunch and refreshments

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Thinking of booking 5 or more courses?
Call us on 01323 811690 for your 10% discount.
>> We offer a 10% discount on our prices if you book any five events at the same time. These five courses can be made up of
any combination and don't all have to be for you, they can also be for a colleague or friend.


 

To book by phone, call: 01323 811690

Alternatively, you can download an application form and post or fax it to:
Human Givens College, Chalvington, East Sussex, BN27 3TD
fax:  00 44 (0)1323 811486

Also see, How to Book.

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