
Published online:
01 May 2015
Published in print:
01 July 2014
Online ISBN:
9780191807855
Print ISBN:
9780199674718
Contents
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Emotional freedom techniques Emotional freedom techniques
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The basic recipe The basic recipe
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Preliminaries Preliminaries
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The set-up The set-up
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The tapping sequence The tapping sequence
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The nine-gamut procedure The nine-gamut procedure
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The tapping sequence repeated The tapping sequence repeated
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Revisiting the problem Revisiting the problem
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EFT in practice EFT in practice
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When the basic recipe is not enough When the basic recipe is not enough
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Tapas acupressure technique Tapas acupressure technique
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The TAT nine-step procedure The TAT nine-step procedure
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The nine steps The nine steps
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What is particular about TAT? What is particular about TAT?
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Other energy therapies Other energy therapies
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The effectiveness of energy psychology therapies The effectiveness of energy psychology therapies
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The theories: how might energy psychology therapies work? The theories: how might energy psychology therapies work?
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Meridians and chakras Meridians and chakras
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Energy Energy
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Energy as electromagnetic field Energy as electromagnetic field
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Energy as arousal/vitality Energy as arousal/vitality
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Summary Summary
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Recommended reading Recommended reading
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Notes Notes
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Cite
Marzillier, John, 'The energy therapies', The Trauma Therapies (Oxford , 2014; online edn, Oxford Academic, 1 May 2015), https://doi.org/10.1093/med:psych/9780199674718.003.0012, accessed 8 May 2025.
Abstract
Chapter 12 discusses the energy therapies. This is a group of trauma therapies that explicitly draws upon ideas and practices from Eastern medicine and incorporates them into a set of therapeutic procedures that appear to have remarkably rapid beneficial effects for trauma sufferers. These include emotional freedom techniques (EFT), Tapas acupressure technique (TAT), and the efficacy of energy therapies, and theories as to how energy psychology therapies work.
Keywords:
energy therapies, Eastern medicine, trauma sufferers, emotional freedom techniques, Tapas acupressure technique, trauma therapy
Subject
Clinical Psychology
Collection:
Oxford Clinical Psychology
© Oxford University Press
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