Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology

Comparing the effectiveness of process-experiential with cognitive-behavioral psychotherapy in the treatment of depression

Jeanne Watson ; Laurel Gordon ; Lana Stermac ; Freda Kalogerakos ; Patricia Steckley
Cognitive Behavioural TherapyResearchIndividual randomized controlled trials with big samples (n>30)English
Journal Article - Paid access

Abstracts

This study compared process-experiential and cognitive-behavioral psychotherapy in the treatment of major depression in a researcher allegiance-balanced randomized clinical trial. Sixty-six clients participated in weekly sessions of psychotherapy for 16 weeks. Clients' level of depression, self-esteem, general symptom distress, and dysfunctional attitudes significantly improved in both therapy groups. Clients in both groups showed significantly lower levels of reactive and suppressive coping strategies and higher reflective coping at the end of treatment. Although outcomes were generally equivalent for the 2 treatments, there was a significantly greater decrease in clients' self-reports of their interpersonal problems in process-experiential than cognitive-behavioral therapy.

Keywords
Journal
Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology
Author
Year of Publication
2003
Volume
71
Number of Pages
773-781,
ISSN Number
1939-2117(Electronic),0022-006X(Print)
DOI
10.1037/0022-006X.71.4.773

APA citation

Watson, J., Gordon, L., Stermac, L., Kalogerakos, F., & Steckley, P. (2003). Comparing the effectiveness of process-experiential with cognitive-behavioral psychotherapy in the treatment of depression. Journal Of Consulting And Clinical Psychology, 71, 773-781, . https://doi.org/10.1037/0022-006X.71.4.773