Body Image and Disfigurement CareRoutledge, 15.04.2013 - 180 Seiten Intended for health care professionals working with patients who have suffered a threat to body image, whether from trauma, injury, disease, or the developmental process, Body Image and Disfigurement Care: |
Im Buch
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... bodily appearance, through which people seek to achieve a desired appearance. By contrast, some changes in bodily appearance, and associated changes in body image, are not desired. Whether from birth, through trauma or disease or as a ...
... bodily functions. Nevertheless, many people with altered body appearance and function are not suffering from any illness. It is part of the intention of this book to argue that the best approach to their difficulties is to examine ...
... bodily changes are not also present in visible ones. For example, we have no reason to suppose that reactions to a visible prosthetic will be less far-reaching than those to an invisible one. Indeed, we might suppose the reverse, since ...
... bodily appearance and functions of others, often in complex ways. Indeed, there are many situations where the preservation of professional aloofness is clearly antitherapeutic, and probably designed more to protect the nurse from ...
... bodily sensations. It seems that he views bodily sensations, psychological body image and the ego as being intimately related, a view consistent with the Freudian formulation, noted above, of the ego as principally deriving from bodily ...
Inhalt
1 | |
7 | |
PART 2 Disfigurement and its consequences | 53 |
PART 3 Using the cognitivebehavioural approach to disturbed body image | 116 |
References | 153 |
Author index | 165 |
Subject index | 168 |