North Carolina Society of Clinical Hypnosis
39th Annual Conference
September 26-27, 2008
The
Rigmor House 5501 Hwy 54W, Chapel Hill, NC 27516
http://www.rigmorhouse.com
Friday September 26
AFFECT
REGULATION TOOLS: PRACTICAL
STRATEGIES FOR INDIVIDUAL AND RELATIONSHIP THERAPY
Presented
by
Carolyn
Daitch, Ph.D., BCETS
Director
of the Center for
the Treatment of Anxiety Disorders in Farmington Hills, Michigan
This
workshop offers an affect regulation toolbox of techniques that incorporate
hypnosis and mindfulness. With the
right tools, therapists can help highly reactive patients stay calm in
stressful situations. Patients who
are easily triggered can learn to tone down and manage their emotional
responses. Therapists can dip into
this toolbox for practial and effective interventions that can help patients
mitigate anxiety, stress, psychosomatic symptoms and navigate conflicted
relationships with spouses, adult children and co-workers. The workshop also teaches therapists to
transfer therapeutic learning through easy-to-master at-home practice
sessions.
Saturday September
27
The Use of
Hypnosis in a Family Medicine Practice
Joseph
Zastrow, M.D.
This workshop will review the current anatomic and
radiographic understanding of the black box we call hypnosis. Joe will review
the literature for support of hypnosis in certain key medical conditions. He
will review rapid induction techniques used in his office practice and bring
his practical pearls of wisdom. His combined didactic and interactive approach
to teaching should provide value to all types of practitioners.
Expanding Hypnotic Pain
Management to the Affective Dimension of Pain - Brief Ericksonian Approach
Jeffrey
B. Feldman, Ph.D., Assistant
Professor Section of Neuropsychology, Department of Neurology
Wake
Forest University School of Medicine
Neuroimaging studies have identified multiple
interacting brain structures and pathways associated with the sensory,
affective and cognitive dimensions of pain that are likely to be involved in
individual differences in pain sensitivity. Hypnotic suggestion was used to
differentially activate brain structures most associated with the sensory and affective
dimensions of pain. It was found that the affective
rather than the sensory dimension of pain was most predictive of autonomic
arousal. Hypnotic
approaches to pain management have to date focused primarily on the sensory
aspects of pain. Explicitly
incorporating the affective dimension of pain as a simultaneous focus of
treatment greatly expands the role of hypnosis in pain management in a manner
congruent with the way Erickson practiced. It generates a brief tool for increased coping in the high
percentage of less responsive patients who do not get initial significant
reduction of the sensation of pain through hypnotic procedures. The proposed workshop
will
involve a didactic presentation, clinical demonstration and individual
exercises designed to enable participants to more effectively work with the
affective dimension of pain.