• Connecting Paradigms: A Trauma Informed & Neurobiological Framework for Motivational Interviewing Implementation

  • By: Matthew S. Bennett
  • Narrated by: Nathan W. Wood
  • Length: 6 hrs and 46 mins
  • 4.6 out of 5 stars (99 ratings)

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Connecting Paradigms: A Trauma Informed & Neurobiological Framework for Motivational Interviewing Implementation  By  cover art

Connecting Paradigms: A Trauma Informed & Neurobiological Framework for Motivational Interviewing Implementation

By: Matthew S. Bennett
Narrated by: Nathan W. Wood
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Publisher's summary

Connecting Paradigms: A Trauma-Informed & Neurobiological Framework for Motivational Interviewing Implementation provides an innovative approach to helping those struggling with past trauma to make critical life changes and heal from their pain and suffering. Scientific understanding of the brain, the impact of trauma, and research around behavioral change has grown exponentially over the last several decades. This knowledge is challenging and transforming thinking around how we provide mental health and substance abuse education, medical care, criminal justice, and social work. Connecting Paradigms presents an integrated model, combining research in neurobiology, trauma, behavioral change, harm reduction, and motivational interviewing into a practical skillset easily implemented across a variety of settings and professions.

©2017 Matthew S Bennett (P)2017 Matthew S Bennett

What listeners say about Connecting Paradigms: A Trauma Informed & Neurobiological Framework for Motivational Interviewing Implementation

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Great Book!

Valuable perspective on trauma and neurobiology's effects on MI. This is one I actually took notes on and might buy a hard copy for reference. However, I found the narrator's affected accent when quoting Tich Nhat Hanh to be mildly amusing bordering on slightly offensive. No need to take on a fake Asian accent to enhance the message. Otherwise, great audio.

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11 people found this helpful

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Useful, well written, poor narration

A very useful and well written overview and integration of motivational interviewing with theories of trauma, stages of change and harm reduction. Clinicians new to the field will find this very helpful, particularly with clients that present as 'resistant' with evidence-based recommendations to help clients move toward change. However, the narration is, sorry to say, horrendous. The narrator was not able to pronounce words intelligibly to the degree that I often could not decipher terms that he spoke. I wish Audible would review these audio books prior to offering them to their customers. That being said, the book was helpful enough that I also bought a hard copy.

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8 people found this helpful

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Amazing book

If you are a healthcare provider, counselor or social worker this book is of great help. One of the best books I came across about motivational interviewing. 100% recommended.

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4 people found this helpful

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A little drab at times but worth it

I really enjoyed this book because it helps to create a trauma informed perspective. It really helps connect several of the techniques that I use and explain why they work with the brain.

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3 people found this helpful

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Good information

The content is important for clinicians but the narration is terrible and the use of Asian accent is wildly inappropriate.

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2 people found this helpful

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Comprehe comprehensive, for professional mental health caregivers

Some complex ideas and technical information are presented in such an organized way as to make them easy to understand and incorporate. Very well-balanced in terms of scientific information, anecdotes, and training. The reader will leave with many Ideas for honing their skills and a very solid understanding of the science behind these paradigms and techniques

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2 people found this helpful

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A useful text for professionals and care provider

While I enjoyed and learned quite a bit from this book, I feel the diatribe the entire concept of profit was foolish and completely off base. Stick to psychology; your economics opinions stink.

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1 person found this helpful

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If you are in the mental health field this book is for you

Gave a fantastic overview of MI with actual guidance on how to use it with clients. Further sparked me to continue my research and practice of MI and will continue to use this book as a reference.

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Difficult to imagine a worse narrator.

It is truly difficult to imagine someone doing a worse job narrating. So very, very unclear.I thought that perhaps this person was a friend of the authors but he is a professional. Sad. He says the word structure like "shtrucksher," and every "the" was "da." Nearly all of the words run together and the cadence is hard to describe but kind of like he was singing the same tune over and over. However most astonishing was a very inappropriate...impersonation (?) of Thich Nhat Hanh. Clearly, there were not enough ears on this, and definitely not the actual authors who seems to have a very good understanding of issues of race and class. Very strange, very difficult to understand, and very much negatively affected the experience of the entire book, which I was so eager to read. I don't know how to separate the two at this point.

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Important! Timely AND Timeless.

MI is an art that I’ve thought very similar to the Buddhist concept of Skillful Means. I can’t think of many approaches More Skillful, than eliciting someone’s own, honest, values as a fuel for behavioral, emotional, and psychological healing, empowerment, and change.
The author makes a strong and clear case for ‘helpers’ to take neurophysiology and epigenetic factors as a standard when planning and enacting their trauma-informed care. Not since Bessel van der Kolk’s “The Body Keeps the Score,” have I encountered such a rich, comprehensive, and accessible look at the brain, the mind, and motivation on trauma.
Thank you for the eloquent share of your passion for the helper’s work, Mr Bennett; you’ve taught me a great deal.

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