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The Clinical Effectiveness of Neurolinguistic Programming

A Critical Appraisal

Despite widespread use, Neurolinguistic Programming (NLP) is a topic of much debate, often receiving criticism from academic and professional sectors. In this book international academics, researchers and therapists are brought together to examine 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 and her colleagues provide a critical appraisal of evidence-based research in the area to indicate the benefits of the approach and identify the need for an increase in randomized well-controlled clinical trials. Contributors also explore how NLP has been used to treat various disorders including: post-traumatic stress disorder phobias addictions anxiety disorders mild depression. Illustrated throughout with clinical examples and case studies, this book is key reading for practitioners and researchers interested in NLP, as well as postgraduate students.

The originators of NLP, Richard Bandler and John Grinder, brought their
expertise in the more rigorous fields of linguistics and mathematics to the study of
three of the most effective therapists of the 1960s: Milton H. Erickson (1985),
Virginia Satir, (1991), and Fritz Perls (1969). Although many would say that the
work and style of these three therapists couldn't be more different, Bandler and
Grinder discovered that many of the processes that they used with clients were
very similar.