|
||||||
Psychologist explores ways in which cognitive-behavior therapy has been successfully applied to helping parents and couples.
Cognitive-behavior therapy (CBT) is an effective psychological treatment that can easily be adapted and integrated for therapy with families and couples. There exist several practical applications of this classic therapy. Behavioral Marital Therapy (BMT)This treatment focuses on altering a couple’s unrealistic expectations and aims to help them build happier, less distressed relationships based on mutual acceptance. The main form of intervention is cognitive restructuring or the creation of new attitudes and beliefs leading to a general shift in psychological focus. Often BMT will include teaching communication and problem-solving skills through instruction, modeling, and behavioral practice either in sessions or with homework. The therapist serves as educator or coach whose task is to help the couple stay positive, solution-focused, specific, and balanced. BMT goals include
Behavioral Parent Training (BPT)Emphasis here is on child management and the modification of undesirable behavior. Parents’ definition of the problem is accepted, although the degree to which parents’ problematic thinking and behavior maintains the problem is dealt with when necessary. The therapist functions mainly as an educator, coach, or consultant to parents. Although other necessary CBT techniques might precede or augment this training, the following steps are typical examples of what a BPT training process entails:
CBT Applied to FamiliesThe aim of this treatment is to help families and children overcome or learn to deal with existing pathological behavior of youngsters. This might involve parents and families in several different ways.
Either CBT family therapy above aims to provide sufficient basis for the child to be instructed, coached, and supported at home, a critical outcome required for long-term behavior change. The work that applies CBT to family issues is fundamentally about training parents to model, coach, de-escalate, and reduce triggers for undesirable behavior. For additional reading on related topics, please see the following articles: Children and Behavioral Problems Psychology Therapies for Children
The copyright of the article Helping Couples and Families in Family Counselling is owned by Pauline Kafka. Permission to republish Helping Couples and Families in print or online must be granted by the author in writing.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
|
||||||