General information:
• What are the human givens?
• Why we need to understand healthy minds?
• Where did the human givens ideas come from?
• Why this approach is important for psychotherapy?
• Support our work
• What is an 'organising idea'?
• A look at psychotherapy
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About the Institute:
• About the Institute
• Organisational structure
• Membership
• Membership Levels and Benefits
• Advantages of Membership
• How to Join
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• Aims and Objectives
• Activities
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• Specialist sections
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• Latest news
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• Contact us
• Disclaimer
Human givens therapy:
• Professional Register of qualified human givens practioners
• How a human givens therapist can help
• Therapy or counselling?
• Effective counselling/therapy checklist
• Choosing a therapist (or counsellor)
• Human givens training
The Emotional Needs Audit:
• About the Emotional Needs Audit — a project to take the
'emotional temperature' of the nation
• Current Emotional Needs Audit UK results
Use our archive:
Information on:
• Addiction
• Anger
• Anxiety
• Depression
• Education
• The human givens approach
• OCD (obsessive compulsive disorder)
• Schizophrenia (psychosis)
• The importance of sleep
• Why we dream dreaming
• Trauma and phobias
Articles and interviews:
Anxiety, PTSD and Trauma
• The fast cure for phobia and trauma: evidence that it works
• Post-traumatic stress disorder: why some treatments work so fast
Case histories
• They came in the night
• On the receiving end...
• "I came away with so many ideas"
• Give your car keys to someone who loves you
• Fauklands veteran case study
• "Therapy on the hoof"
• The road to recovery
• Evidence of learning
• "It's what's right with you that fixes what's wrong"
• Further case studies
Depression
• How to lift depression safely and quickly
• On the receiving end...
• The road to recovery
• "It's what's right with you that fixes what's wrong"
• Dreaming to forget: the real reason why
Dreaming
• Dreaming to forget: the real reason why
• Why CBT doesn't help GPs treat depression
• How to lift depression safely and quickly
Education
• Targets, inspections and the human givens
• Good choices: autism and the human givens
• Evidence of learning
• "It's what's right with you that fixes what's wrong"
• Teaching that works: the hg approach in the classroom
Ethics
• The limits of tolerance: ethics and human nature
• Why abstractions confuse people
• Knowledge beyond words: confusion and ethics
Interviews
• Richard Bentall Ð A new look at psychosis
• Daniel Nettle Ð Madness, creativity and human nature
• Professor Ian Robertson Ð Mind Sculpture
• Adam Curtis Ð The Century of the Self
• John Ratey Ð The Social Brain
• Tim Bond Ð BACP ethics guidelines
Mental Health Studies, CBT, the NHS and Psychotherapy
• Why CBT doesn't help GPs treat depression
• Bringing the help to home
• The Doctrines of Psychology
• Psychotherapy's Third Wave? The promise of narrative
• The road to recovery
• Why psychiatrists should be more like plumbers
• Human givens and social work
• The APET model: standing cognitive therapy on its head
New insights and developments in the human givens approach
• Dreaming to forget: the real reason why
• How to lift depression safely and quickly
• Great Expectations
Psychosis
• Bringing the help to home
• A new look at psychosis
• Imagination and madness
• "This trembling web": The brain and beyond
• Dreaming to forget: the real reason why
Resources and techniques
• The APET model: standing cognitive therapy on its head
• The fast cure for phobia and trauma: evidence that works
• How to lift depression safely and quickly
• Dreaming to forget: the real reason why
• Nutrition's role in restoring mental health
• Why psychiatrists should be more like plumbers
• The Trickster: Medicine's forgotten character
• Post-traumatic stress disorder: why some treatments work so fast
• Great Expectations
Society and culture
• A seething mass of desires
• Common ground: diplomacy and the human givens
• Exploring the CULT in culture
• The Social Brain
• Human givens and social work
• The Human Givens Charter
Professional Members' Area:
This section is only accessible by professional members of the HGI using their login name and password. Professional members have all passed the Human Givens Diploma and use the HG approach in their work.
• Professional Members' Area (home page)
• Peer Supervision Groups
• Consultative Council
• Job vacancies
• Latest news
• Continuing Professional Development
— CPD requirement
— supervision requirement
• Useful downloads
• Newsletters
• Professional 'eu' email addresses
• Private Practice:
— getting started
— marketing yourself
— what you need to know
— stationery/sales leaflet options
• Specialist Sections:
— The Association of HG Practitioners in the NHS
— The HGI Education section
— HGI Research Practice Network
• Supervision / peer group support
• Internet forums
• Useful links
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