WellSpring
Practice Guides
Cognitive and Behaviour Therapies
Cognitive and Behaviour Therapies
are the most studied and widely evaluated of the different psychotherapeutic
approaches. As well as being recognise by the medical profession
as useful for treating many emotional and lifestyle problems, they
are also widely available in private, voluntary and government
funded counselling agencies. They are the basis behind such services
as marriage guidance, bereavement, post-traumatic stress and substance
abuse counselling
Cognitive Therapies
An experienced psychotherapist will probably draw on several different
types of CT - the underlying precept behind them all is that
it is our perception of ourselves and others, and of the
events that gave rise to them that cause emotional and behavioural
problems, and not the events themselves. The aim of the therapy
is to alter a clients belief system in order that problems can be eliminated.
Brief
Solution-Focused Therapy
- this is generally the
therapy used when a specific problem i.e. phobia, is present.
It generally takes up to 3 sessions.
Cognitive-Analytical
Therapy
- This approach draws on psychoanalytic
as well as cognitive techniques. A structured and focused
framework is used to encourage patients to understand the
origins of their attitudes and beliefs, and the effect
they have on present feelings and behaviour in order that
change may occur. Treatment may take several months or
even longer.
Cognitive-Behavioural Therapy
- psychologists
rather than psychotherapists developed this method of treatment.
Clients are required to question and remodel their basic
outlook on life. Treatment may last from about three months.
Rational-Emotive
Behaviour Therapy
- Similar to CBT, practitioners
of REBT believe that most emotional distress is the result
of irrational or harmful beliefs. A technique called "disputing" is
used to help patients to question their current attitudes
and expectations, and to replace negative ones with new,
more positive and productive ones.
Reality Therapy
- Reality Therapists believe
that human behaviour is designed to satisfy five basic needs,
survival, the need to belong, the desire for power, the urge
for freedom and the need for pleasure and entertainment. RT
is designed to make people aware of their responsibility for
their own actions and to recognise the failings of their current
behaviour patterns and beliefs to satisfy their five basic
needs, the client is then guided into exploring other ways
of behaving and feeling. Treatment generally lasts for several
months.
Personal Construct Therapy
- PCT is based
on the theory that we perceive the world not as it is, but
as we construct it from personal experience. Treatment involves
helping clients to restructure their view of the world, and
is likely to last several months.
Behavioural Therapy
Behaviourism was an attempt to explain human psychology through studies of the
behaviour of animals - Ivan Pavlov being the instigator. In the years after Pavlov's
theory became common knowledge, a number of researchers began to apple the findings
to the study of human behaviour.
Behavioural therapists believe that poorly adapted behaviour and negative attitudes
feed back into the environment, making it worse and reinforcing the stimuli that
caused the problems in the first place. The aim of the therapy is therefore to
correct the undesirable behaviour patterns and perceptions, and to encourage
the formation of behaviours and attitudes that are well adapted and productive.
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