CBH Partners offers many helpful client resources, from links to professional organizations and consumer/informational websites to books and smart device apps that we integrate into our clinical work (Post updated 8/27/24).
“Prospera” CBT Coaching
What is Cyberchondria?
Courtesy of PsychCentral: “Cyberchondria — similar to hypochondria — is when searching the internet for medical information leads to extreme health anxiety.”
Psychological Assessment
Addressing the Psychological Wellbeing of Black Professionals
What is Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT)?
Mindful News Consumption
No Surprises: “Good Faith Estimate”
Relationship OCD
COVID-19 Vaccine Mis/Dis-information
“The spread of misinformation on social media and through other channels can affect COVID-19 vaccine confidence. Misinformation often arises when there are information gaps or unsettled science, as human nature seeks to reason, better understand, and fill in the gaps…disinformation is false information deliberately created and disseminated with malicious intent.”
Post via the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
Electronic Medical Records (EMR)
Case Consultation, Supervision, and Training
Sexual and Gender Minorities (SGM)
Integrative Behavioral Couple Therapy (IBCT)
Courtesy of PsychCentral: “IBCT assumes that relationship problems result not just from the egregious actions and inactions of partners but also in their emotional reactivity to those behaviors.”
"Getting Back Out There"
CBT for Bipolar Disorder
CBT for Insomnia
Courtesy of the Mayo Clinic: “Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for insomnia is a structured program that helps you identify and replace thoughts and behaviors that cause or worsen sleep problems with habits that promote sound sleep.”
CBT for Panic Disorder
Courtesy of the Psychiatric Times: “Treatment components of CBT include education, breathing retraining, cognitive restructuring, interoceptive exposure, and in vivo (i.e., real world) exposure.”
Women's Wellness
Physical and mental health is important for everyone. Yet, we often forget about differences in gender when it comes to managing health concerns. Men and women have very different responses to life's stressors. Their bodies and minds react in unique ways. For women, the response can often be even more complex.
