Psychotherapy Research
The effects of adding emotion-focused interventions to the client-centered relationship conditions in the treatment of depression.
Abstracts
A study was conducted to test the effects of adding emotion-focused interventions to the empathic relationship. The authors compared client-centered therapy, which provides an empathic relationship based on the relational attitudes of empathy, positive regard, and congruence, and emotion-focused therapy (EFT), which integrates process-guiding emotion-focused interventions that focus on depressogenic affective-cognitive problems with a client-centered supportive relationship. Thirty-eight patients meeting DSM-IV criteria for major depressive disorder were randomly assigned to 16 to 20 sessions of 1 of the 2 treatments. Clients' level of depressive symptoms, general symptom distress, interpersonal distress, and self-esteem improved in each condition, but improvement on symptomatology was superior in the EFT condition. An empathic relationship appears to be enhanced by the addition of specific emotion-focused interventions.
| Słowa kluczowe | |
| Journal |
Psychotherapy Research
|
| Autor | |
| Rok publikacji |
2006
|
| Głośność |
16
|
| Number of Pages |
536-546,
|
| ISSN Number |
1468-4381(Electronic),1050-3307(Print)
|
| DOI |
10.1080/10503300600589456
|