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Book
Peter J. Bieling, Randi E. McCabe, Martin M. Antony · 2006
A comprehensive clinical guide bridging cognitive-behavioral therapy protocols with group dynamics and process, addressing practical challenges in leading CBT groups across multiple psychiatric disorders including anxiety, depression, eating disorders, and substance abuse.
Sequence ladder
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What this book knows
Structured group delivery makes CBT more accessible and potent across disorders, when therapists master the distinct logic of the group format.
mind-and-cognition
A group can serve as a laboratory in which participants can test out automatic thoughts and experiment with behaviors in a relatively safe environment.
CBTG-RC-296Therapy aims at gaining access to, creating awareness of, understanding, then restructuring maladaptive thinking–feeling–behaving patterns.
CBTG-RC-293transformation
Group therapy offers an opportunity to challenge the assumption that therapy will be 'received'; the group endorses the premise that self-change is possible.
CBTG-RC-295Patients are prepared to tolerate physical discomfort from normalized eating, with emphasis that the discomfort will gradually pass.
CBTG-RC-258self-and-identity
Patients may work to define their identity independent of others, through testing competencies and interpersonal skills within the group structure.
CBTG-RC-307Treatment broadens to other relevant issues: self-esteem, self-control, impulse regulation, interpersonal functioning, and emotional expression.
CBTG-RC-2446 published passages · book excerpt · research analysis
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