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Cognitive Therapy with Adolescents

American Journal of Psychotherapy, 1987
Cognitive immaturity and distortion are frequently observed in normal adolescents, as well as those with severe psychiatric and behavioral disorders. Misunderstandings of the therapy process and an unstable therapeutic alliance often complicates treatment.
Schrodt Gr, Fitzgerald Ba
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Cognitive Family Therapy

Journal of Sex & Marital Therapy, 1980
Cognitive family therapy is a new short-term psychotherapy which facilitates self-disclosure. The paper defines self-disclosure and differentiates cognitive self-disclosure from self-exposure and emotional self-disclosure. The relationship of cognitive self-disclosure in facilitating marital intimacy is developed.
E. M. Waring, Lila Russell
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Cognitive Therapy

2001
Publisher Summary Cognitive therapy is a form of psychotherapy that posits that how an individual perceives and interprets events strongly influences how that person responds emotionally and behaviorally. It combines cognitive and behavioral techniques to teach patients to challenge biased perceptions and the underlying assumptions that may cause them
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Cognitive Therapy with Couples

The American Journal of Family Therapy, 1982
Although behavior therapists who treat distressed marriages traditionally have acknowledged that spouses’ cognitive appraisals of each other’s behavior play a role in relationship dysfunction, interventions focusing on cognitive components of relationship problems clearly have played a secondary or even a minor role in formal behavioral approaches ...
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An appraisal of cognitive therapy.

Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 1993
This review describes the development of cognitive therapy (CT) for depression in the 1960s and 1970s and its application to diverse clinical populations. The question of how CT works, in terms of both active therapeutic ingredients and mechanisms of change within the individual, is addressed.
Adele M. Hayes, Clive J. Robins
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Cognitive therapy with inpatients

General Hospital Psychiatry, 1997
Psychotherapeutic interventions often play a major role in the treatment of patients who are hospitalized for depression. Much of the "therapeutic milieu" of the inpatient unit includes patient participation in group psychotherapy and in one-on-one psychotherapy with staff members.
Aaron T. Beck   +3 more
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Changes in Cognition with Pharmacotherapy and Cognitive Therapy

British Journal of Psychiatry, 1983
SummaryA treatment trial comparing cognitive therapy and pharmacotherapy, alone and in combination, in depressed out-patients, indicated that outcome on cognitive variables was similar to outcome on mood and severity measures, pharmacotherapy being less effective than cognitive therapy or the combined treatment in a hospital and a general practice ...
S. Bishop, I. M. Blackburn
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Cognitive Therapy for Depression

Psychopathology, 1986
Cognitive therapy alone without concurrent behavioral components seems to be ineffective in the treatment of depressive patients. However, the combination of cognitive and behavioral treatment procedures including social skills training is effective even in the therapy of definite endogenous depression.
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Cognitive therapy for psychosis

Psychiatry, 2004
Cognitive therapy has established itself as an effective intervention for psychosis and is now a requirement in the NICE schizophrenia guidelines. The evidence is strongest for positive resistant to medication alone. There is also now support for its use with negative symptoms, early intervention and comorbid substance misuse.
Kingdon, David, Hansen, Lars
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Cognitive psychology and cognitive therapies

1998
Cognitive psychology is chiefly concerned with experimental investigation of those mental processes to do with knowing and understanding that can either be brought readily into consciousness or revealed experimentally through the careful manipulation of variables.
Bridget Adams, Barbara Bromley
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