This book examines the current evidence of the clinical efficacy of NLP techniques, considering how NLP can be effective in facilitating change, enrichment and symptom relief.
Lisa Wake
Richard M. Gray is Assistant Professor at the School of Criminal Justice, Fairleigh Dickinson University, and former substance abuse treatment coordinator in the United States Probation Department, Eastern District of New York, Brooklyn, New York.
Frank S. Bourke, PhD, is the Executive Director and founder of the Research and Recognition Project, a not for profit corporation committed to bringing NLP and related technology into evidentiary medicine. He completed his PhD research at the Institute of Psychiatry in London, has taught at Cornell University and worked in the mental health field as a clinician, trainer and administrator for over 40 years.
Andreas, Foreword. Wake, Bourke, Gray, Introduction. Part I: Clinical and Practitioner Evidence. Gray, Bolstad, Phobias. Gray, Bolstad, PTSD. Wake, Derks, Turkowski, Other Therapeutic Applications. Grimley, Anxiety Disorders. Gear, Addictions. Wake, Nielsen, Nielsen, Zaharia, Depression Symptom Clusters. Part II: NLP Contemporary Research. Gray, Wake, Andreas, Bolstad, Indirect Research into the Applications of NLP. Gray, Liotta, Wake, Cheal, Research and the History of Methodological Flaws. Part III: Toward the Future. Wake, Bourke, Schutz, Gray, Certification and Training. Bourke, Gray, Wake, Future Directions.