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Authors: Irvin D. Yalom,Molyn Leszcz

Tags: #Psychology, #General, #Psychotherapy, #Group

The Theory and Practice of Group Psychotherapy (131 page)

BOOK: The Theory and Practice of Group Psychotherapy
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35
I. Yalom,
Existential Psychotherapy
(New York: Basic Books, 1980).

36
L. Baider, “Psychological Intervention with Couples After Mastectomy,”
Support Care Cancer
3 (1995): 239–43. B. Bultz, M. Speca, P. Brasher, P. Geggie, and S. Page, “A Randomized Controlled Trial of a Brief Psychoeducational Support Group for Partners of Early Stage Breast Cancer Patients,”
Psycho-Oncology
9 (2000): 303–13.

37
Leszcz, “Group Therapy.”

38
S. Folkman and S. Greer, “Promoting Psychological Well-Being in the Face of Serious Illness: When Theory, Research, and Practice Inform Each Other,”
Psycho-Oncology
9 [2000]: 11–19.) Not surprisingly, integrating these coping dimensions creates particularly powerful interventions as noted by R. Lazarus, “Toward Better Research on Stress and Coping,”
American Psychologist
55 (2000): 665–73.

39
D. Kissane et al., “Cognitive-Existential Group Psychotherapy for Women with Primary Breast Cancer: A Randomized Controlled Trial,”
Psycho-Oncology
12 (2003): 532–46. V. Helgeson, S. Cohen, R. Schulz, and J. Yasko, “Education and Peer Discussion Group Interventions and Adjustment to Breast Cancer,”
Archives of General Psychiatry
56 (1999): 340–47. D. Scaturo, “Fundamental Clinical Dilemmas in Contemporary Group Psychotherapy,”
Group Analysis
37 (2004): 201–17.

40
F. Fawzy and N. Fawzy, “A Post-Hoc Comparison of the Efficiency of a Psychoeducational Intervention for Melanoma Patients Delivered in Group Versus Individual Formats : An Analysis of Data from Two Studies,”
Psycho-Oncology
5 (1996): 81–89.

41
I. Yalom,
Gift of Therapy
(New York: HarperCollins, 2003), 6–10.

42
SEGT addresses the following main areas: (1) medical illness and treatment; (2) cognitive and behavioral coping skills for the illness and treatment; (3) family and social network issues; (4) relationships with health care providers; (5) life values and priorities; (6) self-image; (7) death and dying; and (8) group functioning regarding task and engagement. Each group ends with a stress reduction exercise of relaxation and guided imagery. D. Spiegel and J. Spira,
Supportive Expressive Group Therapy: A Treatment Manual of Psychosocial Interventions for Women with Recurrent Breast Cancer
(Stanford: Psychosocial Treatment Laboratories, 1991). Leszcz and Goodwin, “The Rationale and Foundations.” D. Spiegel and C. Classen,
Group Therapy for Cancer Patients: A Research-Based Handbook of Psychosocial Care
(New York: Basic Books, 2000).

43
C. Classen et al., “Effectiveness of a Training Program for Enhancing Therapists’ Understanding of the Supportive-Expressive Treatment Model for Breast Cancer Groups,”
Journal of Psychotherapy Practice and Research
6 (1997): 211–18. D. Spiegel et al., “Group Psychotherapy for Recently Diagnosed Breast Cancer Patients: A Multicenter Feasibility Study,”
Psycho-Oncology
8 (1999): 482–93. P. Goodwin et al., “Lessons Learned from Enrollment in the BEST Study: A Multicenter, Randomized Trial of Group Psychosocial Support in Metastatic Breast Cancer,”
Journal of Clinical Epidemiology
53 (2000): 47–55.

44
Spiegel et al., “Group Psychotherapy for Recently Diagnosed.” M. Esplen et al., “A Supportive-Expressive Group Intervention for Women with a Family History of Breast Cancer: Results of a Phase II Study,”
Psycho-Oncology
9 (2000): 243–52.

45
I. Yalom and C. Greaves, “Group Therapy with the Terminally Ill,”
American Journal of Psychiatry
134 (1977): 396–400. D. Spiegel, J. Bloom, and I. Yalom, “Group Support for Patients with Metastatic Cancer,”
Archives of General Psychiatry
38 (1981): 527–33. D. Spiegel and M. Glafkides, “Effects of Group Confrontation with Death and Dying,”
International Journal of Group Psychotherapy
33 (1983): 433–37. F. Fawzy et al., “Malignant Melanoma: Effects of an Early Structured Psychiatric Intervention, Coping, and Affective State on Recurrence and Survival 6 Years Later,”
Archives of General Psychiatry
50 (1993): 681–89. T. Kuchler et al., “Impact of Psychotherapeutic Support on Gastrointestinal Cancer Patients Undergoing Surgery: Survival Results of a Trial,”
Hepatogastroenterology
46 (1999): 322–35. S. Edelman, J. Lemon, D. Bell, and A. Kidman, “Effects of Group CBT on the Survival Time of Patients with Metastatic Breast Cancer,”
Psycho-Oncology
8 (1999): 474–81. A. Ilnyckj, J. Farber, M. Cheang, and B. Weinerman, “A Randomized Controlled Trial of Psychotherapeutic Intervention in Cancer Patients,”
Annals of the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada
27 (1994): 93–96. Kissane et al., “Cognitive-Existential Group Psychotherapy.”

46
Spiegel notes that contemporary trials may not demonstrate a survival effect because the baseline of psychosocial care provided for all patients with cancer (including the control sample) has improved significantly over the past ten to twenty years, a welcome advance emerging from the recognition that state of mind affects state of body (D. Spiegel, “Mind Matters: Group Therapy and Survival in Breast Cancer,”
New England Journal of Medicine
345 (2001): 1767–68. D. Spiegel, J. Bloom, H. Kraemer, and E. Gottheil, “Effect of Psychosocial Treatment on Survival of Patients with Metastatic Breast Cancer,”
Lancet
8669 (1989): 888–91. A. Cunningham et al., “A Randomized Controlled Trial of the Effects of Group Psychological Therapy on Survival in Women with Metastatic Breast Cancer,”
Psycho-Oncology
7 (1998): 508–17. P. Goodwin et al., “The Effect of Group Psychosocial Support on Survival in Metastatic Breast Cancer,”
New England Journal of Medicine
345 (2001): 1719–26.

47
C. Classen et al., “Supportive-Expressive Group Therapy and Distress in Patients with Metastatic Breast Cancer: A Randomized Clinical Intervention Trial,”
Archives of General Psychiatry
58 (2001): 494–501. Spiegel et al., “Group Psychotherapy for Recently Diagnosed.”

48
A. Beck,
Cognitive Therapy and the Emotional Disorders
(New York: International Universities Press, 1976). G. Klerman, M. Weissman, B. Rounsaville, and E. Chevron,
Interpersonal Psychotherapy of Depression
(New York: Basic Books, 1984).

49
Leszcz, “Gruppenpsychotherapie fur brustkrebspatientinnen.”

50
M. Lieberman, I. Yalom, and M. Miles,
Encounter Groups: First Facts
(New York: Basic Books, 1973).

51
N. Morrison, “Group Cognitive Therapy: Treatment of Choice or Sub-Optimal Option?”
Behavioural and Cognitive Psychotherapy
29 (2001): 311–32.

52
J. White, “Introduction,” in
Cognitive-Behavioral Group Therapy for Specific Problems and Populations
, ed. J. White and A. Freeman (Washington, D.C.: American Psychological Association, 2000), 3–25.

53
Beck,
Cognitive Therapy and the Emotional Disorders.

54
J. Safran and Z. Segal,
Interpersonal Process in Cognitive Therapy
(New York: Basic Books, 1990).

55
T. Oei and L. Sullivan, “Cognitive Changes Following Recovery from Depression in a Group Cognitive-Behaviour Therapy Program,”
Australian and New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry
33 (1999): 407–15.

56
M. Enns, B. Coz, and S. Pidlubny, “Group Cognitive Behaviour Therapy for Residual Depression: Effectiveness and Predictors of Response,”
Cognitive Behaviour Therapy
31 (2002): 31–40.

57
A. Ravindran et al., “Treatment of Primary Dysthymia with Group Cognitive Therapy and Pharmacotherapy: Clinical Symptoms and Functional Impairments,”
American Journal of Psychiatry
156 (1999): 1608–17.

58
S. Ma and J. Teasdale, “Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy for Depression: Replication and Exploration of Differential Relapse Prevention Effects,”
Journal of Consulting Clinical Psychology
72 (2004): 31–40.

59
C. Kutter, E. Wolf, and V. McKeever, “Predictors of Veterans’ Participation in Cognitive-Behavioral Group Treatment for PTSD,”
Journal of Traumatic Stress
17 (2004): 157–62. D. Sorenson, “Healing Traumatizing Provider Interaction Among Women Through Short-Term Group Therapy,”
Archives of Psychiatric Nursing
17 (2003): 259–69.

60
C. Wiseman, S. Sunday, F. Klapper, M. Klein, and K. Halmi, “Short-Term Group CBT Versus Psycho-Education on an Inpatient Eating Disorder Unit,”
Eating Disorders
10 (2002): 313–20. N. Leung, G. Waller, and G. Thomas, “Outcome of Group Cognitive-Behavior Therapy for Bulimia Nervosa: The Role of Core Beliefs,”
Behaviour Research and Therapy
38 (2000): 145–56.

61
C. Dopke, R. Lehner, and A. Wells, “Cognitive-Behavioral Group Therapy for Insomnia in Individuals with Serious Mental Illnesses: A Preliminary Evaluation,”
Psychiatric Rehabilitation Journal
3 (2004): 235–42.

62
J. Lidbeck, “Group Therapy for Somatization Disorders in Primary Care,”
Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavia
107 (2003): 449–56.

63
C. Taft, C. Murphy, P. Musser, and N. Remington, “Personality, Interpersonal, and Motivational Predictors of the Working Alliance in Group Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy for Partner Violent Men,”
Journal of Consulting Clinical Psychology
72 (2004): 349–54.

64
W. Rief, S. Trenkamp, C. Auer, and M. Fichter, “Cognitive Behaviour in Panic Disorder and Comorbid Major Depression,”
Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics
69 (2000): 70–78.

65
A. Volpato Cordioli et al., “Cognitive-Behavioral Group Therapy in Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder: A Randomized Clinical Trial,”
Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics
72 (2003): 211–16.

66
A. Page and G. Hooke, “Outcomes for Depressed and Anxious Inpatients Discharged Before or After Group Cognitive Behaviour Therapy: A Naturalistic Comparison,”
Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease
191 (2003): 653–59. M. Dugas et al., “Group Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy for Generalized Anxiety Disorder: Treatment Outcome and Long-Term Follow-Up,”
Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology
71 (2003): 821–25.

67
R. Heimberg et al., “Cognitive Behavioural Group Therapy vs. Phenelzine Therapy for Social Phobia: 12-Week Outcome,”
Archives of General Psychiatry
55 (1998): 1133–41.

68
R. Siddle, F. Jones, and F. Awenat, “Group Cognitive Behaviour Therapy for Anger: A Pilot Study,”
Behavioural and Cognitive Psychotherapy
31 (2003): 69–83.

69
L. Johns, W. Sellwood, J. McGovern, and G. Haddock, “Battling Boredom: Group Cognitive Behaviour Therapy for Negative Symptoms of Schizophrenia,”
Behavioural and Cognitive Psychotherapy
30 (2002): 341–46. P. Chadwick, S. Sambrooke, S. Rasch, and E. Davies, “Challenging the Omnipotence of Voices: Group Cognitive Behaviour Therapy for Voices,”
Behaviour Research and Therapy
38 (2000): 993–1003.

70
P. Schnurr et al., “Randomized Trial of Trauma-Focused Group Therapy for PostTraumatic Stress Disorder: Results from a Department of Veterans Affairs Cooperative Study,”
Archives of General Psychiatry
60 (2003): 481–89.

71
White, “Introduction,” in White and Freeman, eds.

72
Heimberg et al., “Cognitive Behavioral Group Therapy vs. Phenelzine.”

73
Safran and Segal,
Interpersonal Process in Cognitive Therapy
.

74
White, “Introduction,” in White and Freeman, eds.

75
Heimberg et al., “Cognitive Behavioral Group Therapy vs. Phenelzine.”

76
Klerman et al.,
Interpersonal Psychotherapy of Depression.

77
D. Wilfley, K. MacKenzie, R. Welch, V. Ayers, and M. Weissman,
Interpersonal Psychotherapy for Group
(New York: Basic Books, 2000).

78
D. Wilfley et al., “Group Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy and Group Interpersonal Psychotherapy for the Nonpurging Bulimic Individual: A Controlled Comparison,”
Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology
61 (1993): 296–305. K. MacKenzie and A. Grabovac, “Interpersonal Psychotherapy Group (IPT-G) for Depression,”
Journal of Psychotherapy Practice and Research
10 (2001): 46–51. C. Klier, M. Muzik, K. Rosenblum, and G. Lenz, “Interpersonal Psychotherapy Adapted for the Group Setting in the Treatment of Postpartum Depression,”
Journal of Psychotherapy Practice and Research
10 (2001): 124–31. H. Verdeli et al., “Adapting Group Interpersonal Psychotherapy (IPT-G-U) for a Developing Country: Experience in Uganda,”
World Psychiatry
(June 2003): 114–20. P. Ravitz, “The Interpersonal Fulcrum: Interpersonal Therapy for Treatment of Depression,”
CPA Bulletin
36 (2203): 15–19. Robertson et al., “Group-Based Interpersonal Psychotherapy.”

79
Y. Levkovitz et al., “Group Interpersonal Psychotherapy for Patients with Major Depression Disorder: Pilot Study,”
Journal of Affective Disorders
60 (2000): 191–95.

80
H. Verdeli et al., “Adapting Group Interpersonal Psychotherapy.” P. Bolton et al., “Group Interpersonal Psychotherapy for Depression in Rural Uganda: A Randomized Controlled Trial,”
JAMA
289 (2003): 3117–24.

81
MacKenzie and Grabovac, “Interpersonal Psychotherapy Group.”

82
R. Kessler, K. Mickelson, and S. Zhao, “Patterns and Correlations of Self-Help Group Membership in the United States,”
Social Policy
27 (1997): 27–47.

BOOK: The Theory and Practice of Group Psychotherapy
11.11Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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