This book (and the CCM) is a valuable resource for both clinicians who are new to the field and experienced practitioners. It uses client stories to enhance readers' understanding of the model, as well as periodically checking in with the reader to ensure that the concepts are well understood. I would highly recommend Treating Complex Trauma to practitioners looking for a streuctured approach to working with clients. - Bernadette Nugent, Grief Matters
Mary Jo Barrett and Linda Stone Fish provide lucid justification for their model, case examples that clearly illustrate the text, and 'pause and ponder' sections for the therapist reader. Especially helpful is the emphasis on the need to collaboratively work with the client to move him or her out of 'survival mindstate' into 'engaged mindstate' and the natural process of growth and change. This book is a very welcome addition that expands the growing literature on the treatment of complex trauma in children and adults.- Christine A. Courtois, PhD, ABPP, coauthor of Treatment of Complex Trauma: A Sequenced, Relationship-Based Approach and coeditor of Treating Complex Traumatic Stress Disorders: Scientific Foundations and Therapeutic Models
Barrett and Stone Fish have produced a practical masterpiece that will expand professionals' abilities and capacities to work with complex trauma. They make the problem understandable, from the common biological responses to trauma to its social context. The Collaborative Change Model provides structure and guidance while staying true to the flexibility and nuance necessary for good treatment. - Susan H. McDaniel, PhD, Dr. Laurie Sands Distinguished Professor of Families and Health at the University of Rochester Medical Center
This invaluable practice guide, by leading experts in the field, distills the core principles and priorities in sequential stages of therapy in their highly effective collaborative model. It's a must read for beginning and experienced clinicians that shows that the treatment of complex trauma need not be complicated. - Froma Walsh, PhD, codirector of the Chicago Center for Family Health and Mose & Sylvia Firestone Professor Emerita at the the University of Chicago