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You Made Me Hit You! Interventions with Male Batterers

Introduction

Question 1 | Test | Table of Contents

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Introduction
Welcome to the Home Study Course entitled "You Made Me Hit You: Interventions with Male Batterers," sponsored by the Healthcare Training Institute. Our primary intent for this home study course is to provide quality education to foster your professional growth. The Institute has provided quality education since 1979 to thousands in the US and Canada as well. Hi. My name is Brian Clark. I will be the narrator of this CD. We appreciate that you have chosen our course as a vehicle for you to earn your Continuing Education Credit.

The purpose of this course is to assist you in increasing your knowledge regarding how to treat patients, clients, etc., who batter.

As each case study is given, if the concepts seem to be applicable to your situation, I encourage you to turn your CD player off and make a few notes regarding the application of the principle to your setting. However, these notes are for your purposes only and are not to be sent to the Healthcare Training Institute.

Regarding completion of the Test…at the end of each CD section, a question is asked. This question corresponds with a question in your Test. Merely write the correct letter on the blank line that precedes each question. Keep in mind there is nothing tricky or hard about these questions. They are merely intended to verify the playing of this CD.

These questions are sequential and deal with the section of content that preceded it. For this reason, to facilitate answering each question, you might read the question from the Test prior to listening to that CD section. By knowing what the question is ahead of time, you will know the content to listen for that contains the answer. So just a hint, after you answer a question, read on to the next question in order to give you a "heads up" to listen for the content that contains the answer.

For the purpose of brevity most generally I will use the term "therapists" or "mental health professional." However, don't let these terms deter you from applying the concepts to your situation. When you hear the word "therapists," if your job title is social worker, psychologist, marriage and family therapist, mental health counselor, professional counselor, resident director, program assistant, etc., merely substitute the appropriate term that is the most meaningful to you. In short, don't let my use of the term "therapists" cognitively deter you from hearing the content of a section because your job title is school counselor, for example. I will also use the term "client" for the purposes of brevity. However, if you deal with patients, residents, students, consumers, etc., transpose "client" to the term that is the most meaningful to you in your work setting.

In addition, it is clear that not all batterers are male and all battering victims are female. However, for the purpose of brevity in this course, we will generally refer to the batterer as a male and the victim as a female. By no means is this an attempt to diminish the legitimacy of cases in which the reverse occurs. So when I refer to a male batterer, in your mind, if you have a female batterer, mentally transpose the terminology in order to hear the essence of the treatment message.

So, let's get started...We will discuss such topics as: altering attitudes, team pacing and playfulness, the three stages of abuse, red flags to violence, expanding choice points, overcontrollers vs. undercontrollers: masked dependency, nice guy positioning strategies, the invisible dragon of shame, checkpoints for change, goal-setting, problem goals, and therapeutic ruts.


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