EFT, Emotional Freedom Technique, is an evidenced based Energy Psychology, also known as Tapping - it was created by Gary Craig in the '90's, based on the combined principles of ancient Chinese acupressure and modern psychology. A highly successful and non-invasive therapy that creates balance, physical and emotional wellbeing. It’s easy to do and you can use it anywhere, anytime, on any negative emotional issue.
Per Dawson Churches research Emotional Freedom Techniques (EFT) has moved in the past two decades from a fringe therapy to widespread professional acceptance. Clinical EFT, as validated in many RCTs and outcome studies, has established itself as an efficacious treatment for both psychological and physical conditions. Clinical EFT enjoys a large and growing body of research that has validated it as an “evidence-based” practice that is safe, fast, reliable, and cost-effective. Clinical EFT is supported by professional training programs that teach practitioners to deliver the method as validated by research based on The EFT Manual (Craig, 2010; Church, 2013a). Clinical EFT is elucidated in depth in The Clinical EFT Handbook: A Definitive Resource for Practitioners, Scholars, Clinicians and Researchers (Church & Marohn, 2013). The literature demonstrates sufficient clinical benefit from EFT to argue for its adoption as a front-line primary care intervention within a wide variety of settings and populations.
EFT has been used on these issues and many more:
Per Dawson Churches research Emotional Freedom Techniques (EFT) has moved in the past two decades from a fringe therapy to widespread professional acceptance. Clinical EFT, as validated in many RCTs and outcome studies, has established itself as an efficacious treatment for both psychological and physical conditions. Clinical EFT enjoys a large and growing body of research that has validated it as an “evidence-based” practice that is safe, fast, reliable, and cost-effective. Clinical EFT is supported by professional training programs that teach practitioners to deliver the method as validated by research based on The EFT Manual (Craig, 2010; Church, 2013a). Clinical EFT is elucidated in depth in The Clinical EFT Handbook: A Definitive Resource for Practitioners, Scholars, Clinicians and Researchers (Church & Marohn, 2013). The literature demonstrates sufficient clinical benefit from EFT to argue for its adoption as a front-line primary care intervention within a wide variety of settings and populations.
EFT has been used on these issues and many more:
- Anxiety and depressive conditions
- Confidence building and low self-esteem
- Peak Performance
- Public Speaking and Performance Anxiety
- Social Anxiety
- Stress Management
- Phobias (e.g. heights, flying, spiders)
- Habits (e.g. smoking, nail biting)
clin_eft2.pdf |