Volume 26, No 2, 2019
Human Givens Journal
Format: A4 Printed Journal (60pp) / Digital PDF Journal (60pp)
ISBN: 1473-4850 (ISSN)
- From: £7.50 - £10.00
In stock
Contents
Editorial: ‘In our nature’
‘How we are’ – news, views and information on:
- Failings in neuroscience
- misleading proposed NICE guidelines on depression
- multiple identities
- effects on children of parents’ depression
- compulsive eating
- misunderstandings about consensus
- nausea impact in pregnancy
- dependence on prescription drugs
- walking speed
- universal human needs?
- psychiatric diagnoses found meaningless
- power of the imagination – new ways to harness it
- learning a new language
- antidepressants and suicide risk
- self-harm
- moral beliefs
- why girls may opt less for science
- relaxation that causes anxiety
- false memory for fake news
Articles include
The girl who thought she was a cow
Pat Williams puts an intriguing case to the ‘experts’
Top tips for counselling in secondary education
Pamela Woodford shares what she has learned after many years as a counsellor in school and college
Uses of an elastic band: the power of physical metaphors
Peter Welman illustrates how drawings and artefacts can be used to reinforce therapeutic messages
Two ways of seeing
INTERVIEW: Iain McGilchrist updates Sue Cheshire on his thinking about the differing roles of the left and right hemispheres of the brain
Before I was a therapist
In the first of an occasional series, Freyja Theaker describes how her former career as an economist has informed her HG practice
Seriously sick newborn, severely stressed parents…
Catherine Neil shows how HG understandings can help mitigate the challenges of parenting on a neonatal units
Bringing HG into fashion
Charlotte le-Hardy explains how wellbeing underpins the curriculum of a degree course related to the fashion industry
Perspectives on later life
An excerpt from Declan Lyons’s forthcoming book on boosting psychological and physical health in older age
The duty of candour
Denise Winn explores the best ways to avoid or, failing that, handle being the subject of a client complaint
PLUS: Book Reviews
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To maintain our editorial independence we don’t take advertising, this means every page you read is full of interesting and relevant content. It’s the perfect way to keep up-to-date with developments in the field of mental health and wellbeing – many ground-breaking insights were first published in the HG journal.
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