ACT for Depression: A Clinician's Guide to Using Acceptance and Commitment Therapy in Treating Depression

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New Harbinger Publications, Dec 1, 2007 - Psychology - 336 pages

Psychological research suggests that cognitive behavior therapy (CBT), used alone or in combination with medical therapy, is the most effective treatment for depression. Recent finding, though, suggest that CBT for depression may work through different processes than we had previously suspected. The stated goal of therapeutic work in CBT is the challenging and restructuring of irrational thoughts that can lead to feelings of depression. But the results of recent studies suggest that two other side effects of CBT may actually have a greater impact that thought restructuring on client progress: Distancing and decentering work that helps clients stop identifying with depression and behavior activation, a technique that helps him or her to reengage with naturally pleasurable and rewarding activities. These two components of conventional CBT are central in the treatment approach of the new acceptance and commitment therapy (ACT). This book develops the techniques of ACT into a session-by-session approach that therapists can use to treat clients suffering from depression.

The research-proven program outlined in ACT for Depression introduces therapists to the ACT model on theoretical and case-conceptual levels. Then it delves into the specifics of structuring interventions for clients with depression using the ACT method of acceptance and values-based behavior change. Written by one of the pioneering researchers into the effectiveness of ACT for the treatment of depression, this book is a much-needed professional resource for the tens of thousand of therapists who are becoming ever more interested in ACT.

 

Contents

CHAPTER 1
1
CHAPTER 2
22
CHAPTER 3
38
CHAPTER 4
55
CHAPTER 5
74
CHAPTER 6
92
CHAPTER 7
114
CHAPTER 8
134
APPENDIX B
242
APPENDIX C
245
APPENDIX D
247
APPENDIX E
249
APPENDIX F
269
APPENDIX G
272
APPENDIX H
273
APPENDIX I
274

CHAPTER 9
157
CHAPTER 10
203
CHAPTER 11
227
APPENDIX A
240
APPENDIX J
276
APPENDIX K
278
APPENDIX L
280
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About the author (2007)

Robert D. Zettle, Ph.D., is associate professor in the Department of Psychology at Wichita State University. He completed his predoctoral internship at the Center for Cognitive Therapy in Philadelphia, conducted the first comparative outcome study on what is now known as ACT as part of his dissertation under the supervision of ACT founder Steven Hayes, and has published both basic and applied research relating to rule-governance, experiential avoidance, and ACT for depression for more than twenty years.

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