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 Section 
2 Cognitive Therapy of Anxiety Disorders (Part 2) - Problem Oriented
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  10 Principles of Anxiety Disorder Therapy: Part 2 of 3 ♦         Principle 3: A Sound Therapeutic Relationship Of course, the client must 
    talk openly about fears and anxiety for the therapeutic process to occur. As you 
    know, clients often avoid talking about their fears. One client explained, "If 
    I talk about my anxiety, that will make me feel anxious. I don't want to chance 
    it." As you know, a major part of treatment consists of encouraging the client 
    to face frightening situations so as to be able to view them realistically; Talking 
    about them is one way of reaching the client's goal.
 
 To build this sound 
    relationship, I find, especially with an anxiety disorder client, I have to be 
    acutely aware of possible misinterpretations and misunderstandings of my intention. 
    I recall in one session, I used humor and the "So what if?" technique; 
    that is, to hypothesize the worst possibility - an approach that appeared helpful 
    to the client. At the end of the session, I asked a standard feedback question, 
  "Was there anything about the session that bothered you?" The patient 
    responded, "You seemed to be making fun of me and taking my concerns lightly." 
    This feedback enabled me to correct these misperceptions immediately.
 
 ♦     Principle 4: Therapy is a Collaborative Effort between Therapist and Patient
 I find with an anxiety disordered client the emphasis is on working on problems 
rather than on correcting defects or changing personality. The therapist fosters 
the attitude, "Two heads are better than one" in approaching difficulties. 
When the client is so entangled in symptoms that he or she is unable to join in 
problem solving, I find I may have to assume a leading role. As therapy progresses, 
I encourage the client to take a more active stance.
 
 ♦ Principle 5: Cognitive Therapy Uses Questions
 The therapist is modeling coping 
strategies by asking questions that expand a client's constricted thinking. Often 
a client reports that when confronted by a new anxiety-producing situation, he 
or she will start by asking himself the same questions he heard from the therapist: 
"Where is the evidence?", "Where is the logic?", "What 
do I have to lose?", "What do I have to gain?", "What would 
be the worst thing that could happen?", "What can I learn from this 
experience?"
 
 ♦ Principle 6: Cognitive Therapy is Structured and Directive
 Anxious patients 
tend to go off on tangents. As you know, the therapist can model task-oriented 
behavior by keeping the discussion on the problem at hand. The therapist has to 
set the appropriate tempo for the session. If the pace is too fast, the client 
may miss much of what is being discussed; And if it is too slow, he or she may lose confidence 
in reaching the end result.
 
 The Key
 I find a key with the structure of the session is to look for a common ground or to an earlier causal link. With one client, 
Phil, who was afraid of strangers, his boss, and his parents, the common denominator 
was fear of rejection. Such reductions make the problems more manageable. Sue 
had a fear of elevators that prevented her from looking for a job, and her joblessness 
caused even more difficulties for her. Dealing with the first problem, elevator 
phobia, solved her other problems. Bill had many fears of starting a new job ("People 
won't like me--I won't be able to do the job--I don't think I'll like the people"), 
all of which could be traced back to the basic fear that his bosses would discover 
he had exaggerated on his job application.
 ♦ Principle 7: Cognitive Therapy is Problem Oriented The key here is Conceptualization 
of Problem Definition. As you know, in conceptualizing the client's problem, 
the therapist has to elicit from the patient what the problem means to him. 
The passive-aggressive person may be procrastinating because he believes this 
is the way to avoid being controlled by others. The anxious client, the depressed 
client, the angry client, and the manic client will all have different reasons. 
Procrastination may indicate a shift of priorities that the client has not fully 
accepted; or it may be due to a secondary gain, such as a way to get attention 
or rationalization ("I could be a great painter, but I don't have the self-discipline").
 
 The point is that there are many reasons a client may be procrastinating. Therapist 
and client need to conceptualize the problem jointly before an adequate strategy 
can be chosen. Conceptualization, strategy selection, and technique implementation 
influence and feed each other. Usually this process is an evolving one of conceptualization 
and reconceptualization with corresponding strategy shifts.
 Reviewed 2023
 Peer-Reviewed Journal Article References: Gallagher, M. W., Phillips, C. A., D'Souza, J., Richardson, A., Long, L. J., Boswell, J. F., Farchione, T. J., & Barlow, D. H. (2020). Trajectories of change in well-being during cognitive behavioral therapies for anxiety disorders: Quantifying the impact and covariation with improvements in anxiety. Psychotherapy, 57(3), 379–390.
 
 Muir, H. J., Constantino, M. J., Coyne, A. E., Westra, H. A., & Antony, M. M. (2019). Integrating responsive motivational interviewing with cognitive–behavioral therapy (CBT) for generalized anxiety disorder: Direct and indirect effects on interpersonal outcomes. Journal of Psychotherapy Integration. Advance online publication.
 
 Newman, M. G., & Fisher, A. J. (2013). Mediated moderation in combined cognitive behavioral therapy versus component treatments for generalized anxiety disorder. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 81(3), 405–414.
 
 Robichaud, M. (2010). Review of Cognitive therapy of anxiety disorders: Science and practice [Review of the book Cognitive therapy of anxiety disorders: Science and practice, by D. A. Clark & A. T. Beck, Eds.]. Canadian Psychology/Psychologie canadienne, 51(4), 282–283.
 
 Silverman, W. K., Marin, C. E., Rey, Y., Kurtines, W. M., Jaccard, J., & Pettit, J. W. (2019). Group- versus parent-involvement CBT for childhood anxiety disorders: Treatment specificity and long-term recovery mediation. Clinical Psychological Science, 7(4), 840–855.
 
 QUESTION 2
 To effectively deal with conceptualizing, the therapist has to elicit what  from the client?   
  To select and enter your answer go to .
 
 
 
 
 
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