Format: Audio MP3 file download
Presenter: John Alexander, PhD
The Hypnotic Induction Profile in Clinical practice: A Measure of Hypnotizability and a Means for Exploring Personality Types and Relational Styles to Enhance the Therapeutic Alliance and Improve Clinical Outcomes
With the advent of evidenced-based practices in medicine and psychology, hypnosis is gaining increasing
acceptance as a valuable therapeutic modality. Before deciding to include hypnosis in a treatment plan,
however, it behooves the clinician to first determine whether the individual has the requisite hypnotic
responsivity to benefit from hypnotherapy. It is also important for the clinician to develop a basic
understanding of the patient or client with the problem, in order to engage the individual most effectively in
the treatment process.
The Hypnotic Induction Profile (HIP ) is a brief and effective procedure for rapidly assessing hypnotic
responsivity in clinical practice. What is less known is that an individual?s performance on the HIP also provides
insights into their personality type and relational style---how they relate to the themselves and to the world
around them--as well as their relative mental health and capacity to change. The purpose of this presentation
is to demonstrate: (1) how the HIP is administered, scored, and interpreted to determine a patient or client?s
level of hypnotizability; (2) how findings from the HIP can help foster a therapeutic alliance with a patient or
client by providing the clinician with insights into their personality type and relational style; (3) how a treatment
strategy can be developed from these findings which is both aesthetically pleasing to the individual and
compatible with their unique personal characteristics; (4) how findings from HIP can provide an estimate of an
individual?s overall mental health and capacity to change.
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