<p>The book addresses the problems that couples experience through the life cycle. Each chapter includes an up-to-date review of the literature pertinent to the topic, with a focus on practical interventions which are generally based upon, but not limited to, cognitive and rational emotive behaviora
Cognitive Therapy with Couples and Groups
โ Scribed by Arthur Freeman (auth.), Arthur Freeman (eds.)
- Publisher
- Springer US
- Year
- 1983
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 348
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
It is with great pride and satisfaction that I welcome the publication of Cognitive Therapy with Couples and Groups. For several years, Arthur Freeman, Director of Clinical Services at the Center for Cognitive Therapy, has been a leader in attempting to extend a cognitive approach to new problems and new populations and to expand the approaches for treating the depressed outpatients for whom this approach was first developed. Dr. Freeman brought to the Center the full range and depth of a diverse clinical background which had and continues to broaden and enrich his work both as a therapist and as a teacher. I believe he has applied these dimensions of his experiยญ ence fully in developing and editing this volume. The chapters in this book clearly reflect those clinical problems that have attracted the keenest interest on the part of practicing cognitive therapist, which are encountered so frequently in the course of treating depression. The utilization of cognitive therapy with couples, families, groups, and in training is a clear example of this process, an intriguing topic in its own right. Conversely, coping with special clinical pheยญ nomena such as loneliness is a familiar problem to therapists of deยญ pressed patients. Laura Primakoff demonstrates her creativity and expeยญ rience in her treatment of this subject. Similarly, the chapters on alยญ coholism and agoraphobia are timely elaborations of the original cogniยญ tive model for the individual treatment of depression.
โฆ Table of Contents
Front Matter....Pages i-xiv
Cognitive Therapy An Overview....Pages 1-9
Cognitive Therapy for Depression in a Group Format....Pages 11-41
Rational-Emotive Therapy in Groups....Pages 43-65
Self-Control Group Therapy of Depression....Pages 67-94
Cognitive Therapy in the Family System....Pages 95-106
Cognitive Therapy with Couples....Pages 107-123
Cognitive-Behavioral Strategies to Induce and Enhance a Collaborative Set in Distressed Couples....Pages 125-155
Cognitive Therapy in Groups with Alcoholics....Pages 157-182
Cognitive Therapy with the Young Adult Chronic Patient....Pages 183-198
Cognitive-Behavioral Treatment of Agoraphobia in Groups....Pages 199-220
Sexual Enhancement Groups for Women....Pages 221-260
Oneโs Company; Twoโs a Crowd Skills in Living Alone Groups....Pages 261-301
The Apprenticeship Model....Pages 303-321
The Group Supervision Model in Cognitive Therapy Training....Pages 323-335
Back Matter....Pages 337-343
โฆ Subjects
Clinical Psychology
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