1,296,942 research outputs found
Soliciting clients
What kinds of marketing methods can counsellors use to solicit clients in private practice contexts? In this setting counsellors are clearly operating a business and sound business practices apply. But the business of counselling is also bound by the ethics that govern the delivery of a professional service, which makes higher demands in terms of standards than the trading of goods might require. Professions have a long history of altruism which sanctions baselines for behaviour more stringent than those of fair exchange in the marketplace. For example, the principle of caveat emptor let the buyer beware would not suffice as an ethical baseline for professional practice
Spectrum clients visit Bangladesh
The Clean Clothes Campaign’s fifth update regarding the Spectrum factory collapse summarizes the results of visit to Bangladesh by various companies, trade unions, and labor organizations
Addressing Religion and Spirituality in Psychotherapy: Clients\u27 Perspectives
Twelve adult clients described the role of religion and spirituality in their lives and in therapy as a whole, as well as their specific experiences of discussing religious-spiritual topics in individual outpatient psychotherapy with nonreligiously affiliated therapists. Data were analyzed using Consensual Qualitative Research (CQR; Hill, Thompson, & Williams, 1997). Results indicated that clients were regularly involved in religious-spiritual activities, usually did not know the religious-spiritual orientation of their therapists, but often found them open to such discussions. Specific helpful discussions of religion-spirituality were often begun by clients in the 1st year of therapy, were related to clients\u27 presenting concerns, were facilitated by therapists\u27 openness, and yielded positive effects. Specific unhelpful discussions were raised equally by clients and therapists early in therapy, made clients feel judged, and evoked negative effects. Implications for practice and research are addressed
Clients\u27 Internal Representations of Their Therapists
Thirteen adults in long-term individual psychotherapy were interviewed regarding their internal representations (defined as bringing to awareness the internalized image ) of their therapists. Results indicated that in the context of a good therapeutic relationship, clients\u27 internal representations combined auditory, visual, and kinesthetic (i.e., felt presence) modalities; were triggered when clients thought about past or future sessions, or when distressed; occurred in diverse locations; and varied in frequency, duration, and intensity. Clients felt positively about their representations and used them to introspect or influence therapy within sessions, beyond sessions, or both. The frequency of, comfort with, and use of clients\u27 internal representations increased over the course of therapy, and the representations benefited the therapy and therapeutic relationship. Therapists tended not to take a deliberate role in creating clients\u27 internal representations, and few clients discussed their internal representations with their therapists
Independent living program evaluation for Rebuilding All Goals Efficiently
This paper evaluates the outcome of independent living (IL) services provided to clients with Spinal Cord Injuries (SCI) by a local non-profit organization, Rebuilding All Goals Efficiently (RAGE). Agency services are directed at increasing client self-sufficiency, self-advocacy, and maintenance of least restrictive living environment. Secondary data provided by RAGE for 22 SCI clients who received services in FY10 was used in the evaluation. Outcomes were measured for living arrangement at case closure, impact of services on client’s life, and cost effectiveness of services provided. Descriptive statistical analysis of the data revealed successful outcomes for all 22 SCI clients. All clients reported a decrease in functional limitation allowing them to maintain or attain the least restrictive living arrangement following provision of services. Service costs were higher for clients with 0-14 years post disability onset indicating that services were provided to the clients with the most need, either at onset of injury or to upgrade services. The report includes short and long-term recommendations to the agency for service delivery enhancement and improvement in data collection for future studies
European American Therapist Self-Disclosure in Cross-Cultural Counseling
Eleven European American psychotherapists\u27 use of self-disclosure in cross-cultural counseling was studied using consensual qualitative research. As reasons for self-disclosing, therapists reported the intent to enhance the counseling relationship, acknowledge the role of racism/oppression in clients\u27 lives, and acknowledge their own racist/oppressive attitudes. Results indicated that therapists typically shared their reactions to clients\u27 experiences of racism or oppression and that these self-disclosures typically had positive effects in therapy, often improving the counseling relationship by helping clients feel understood and enabling clients to advance to other important issues
A Qualitative Analysis of Client Perceptions of the Effects of Helpful Therapist Self-Disclosure in Long-Term Therapy
Thirteen adult psychotherapy clients currently in long-term therapy were interviewed twice, with semistructured protocols, about their experiences with helpful instances of therapist self-disclosure. Data were analyzed with a qualitative methodology. Results indicated that helpful therapist self-disclosures (a) occurred when these clients were discussing important personal issues, (b) were perceived as being intended by therapists to normalize or reassure the clients, and (c) consisted of a disclosure of personal nonimmediate information about the therapists. The therapist self-disclosures resulted in positive consequences for these clients that included insight or a new perspective from which to make changes, an improved or more equalized therapeutic relationship, normalization, and reassurance. Implications for psychotherapy are discussed
Cooperative Data Exchange with Unreliable Clients
Consider a set of clients in a broadcast network, each of which holds a
subset of packets in the ground set X. In the (coded) cooperative data exchange
problem, the clients need to recover all packets in X by exchanging coded
packets over a lossless broadcast channel. Several previous works analyzed this
problem under the assumption that each client initially holds a random subset
of packets in X. In this paper we consider a generalization of this problem for
settings in which an unknown (but of a certain size) subset of clients are
unreliable and their packet transmissions are subject to arbitrary erasures.
For the special case of one unreliable client, we derive a closed-form
expression for the minimum number of transmissions required for each reliable
client to obtain all packets held by other reliable clients (with probability
approaching 1 as the number of packets tends to infinity). Furthermore, for the
cases with more than one unreliable client, we provide an approximation
solution in which the number of transmissions per packet is within an
arbitrarily small additive factor from the value of the optimal solution.Comment: 8 pages; in Proc. 53rd Annual Allerton Conference on Communication,
Control, and Computing (Allerton 2015
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