Introducing Cognitive Analytic Therapy. Anthony Ryle
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СКАЧАТЬ and depend on their very various contributions. In a very real, and dialogical, sense there is no such thing as completely original or independent work. Many others who are cited in the text have contributed to the model, its underpinning theory, and its range of applications over the years. By way of example the articulation and presentation of the very first specifically CAT volume was apparently greatly aided and abetted by Professor Glenys Parry, who has continued to be an active champion of the model in different ways over the years since then.

      At a personal level it has been an honor and privilege to undertake the final work of this revision, although this has also felt to be, perhaps unsurprisingly, a challenging and quite arduous undertaking. In many ways it has felt a weighty responsibility to re‐state and update what was essentially Tony's life’s work, although the development of the model was assisted increasingly by various others who are cited in the text. It has also inevitably felt a rather poignant and solitary undertaking at times, despite helpful discussion with various current colleagues, in the absence of Tony’s “larger than life,” innovative, critical, and at times impatient presence and input. It would have been good at various moments to have been able to “chew things over” with him as I and many others would have done in the past.

      This revised edition has unfortunately been delayed by the inevitable distractions and intrusions of life, both personal and professional. This has included, sadly, a protracted but morally unavoidable involvement in campaigning in support of “whistle blowers” in the face of some serious incompetence, victimization, and cronyism within and around the NHS in the UK. But I have also been guilty of some procrastination, a tendency to unhelpful over‐inclusiveness, and aspiring to imagined perfect outcomes; all of this Tony with his talents was much better able to transcend, to “see the wood for trees” quickly, and to express his views articulately—if sometimes very forthrightly!

      We have also in this edition deliberately drawn back from use of the term “intervention” which we felt has become increasingly and excessively used as a synonym for “treatment” or “therapy.” While the word may make some sense as a high‐level, collective descriptive of treatment approaches, it still to our mind carries unfortunate mechanistic and militaristic echoes at best applicable in health care in, for example a “doing to” public health context, but not we suggest as a description of any collaborative, humane, relationally based treatment, far less psychotherapy. Unfortunately, in an era of increasing “commodification” of health care and of staff it also carries for us a quasi‐commercial and mechanical resonance invoked by phrases such as “delivering interventions” which we felt sat uneasily with our therapeutic position and aims. Again, however, we recognize that word usage changes and it may be our views are effectively already superceded and redundant, and that the word already means something different, perhaps regrettably, to a present generation of health care professionals.

      We both sincerely hoped that this reworked and revised edition would be welcome and helpful to a range of people, both fellow mental health professionals and others, and I hope, despite its delayed and rather complicated coming into being, that this will prove to be the case. I very much hope that it may also contribute in some way to a more meaningfully relational and compassionate moving forward for us all much more broadly. This was, I am sure, another deeply felt aspiration and hope on Tony’s part.

      Ian B. Kerr—Whangarei, New Zealand–Aotearoa (2020)

      Preface to the Second Edition

      This book offers an updated introduction and overview of the principles and practice of cognitive analytic therapy (CAT). The last such book appeared over 10 years ago and was the first systematic articulation of a new, integrative model which had been developed over a period of many years. Although there have been two specialist volumes since then (Ryle, 1995, 1997a) it is significant that a restatement of the model and its applications is now necessary. There are many reasons for this. They include the fact that as a young, genuinely integrative model (as acknowledged in the influential Roth and Fonagy report (1996)), it is still evolving and developing both in terms of its theoretical base and its range of applications. In this book, a further exposition of the CAT model of development is given, stressing in particular an understanding of the social formation of the self based on Vygotskian activity theory and Bakhtinian “dialogism.” We also outline an ever‐expanding range of practical applications of CAT as an individual therapy as well as its application as a conceptual model for understanding different disorders and informing approaches to their management by staff teams. This trend has been described (Steve Potter) as “using” CAT, as opposed to “doing” it. Newer or preliminary applications of CAT reviewed here include CAT in old age, with learning disabilities, in anxiety‐related disorders, in psychotic disorders, CAT for self‐harming patients presenting briefly to casualty departments, CAT with the “difficult” patient in organizational settings, and CAT in primary care. In part these also reflect theoretical developments of the model which are also reviewed. Its gradually expanding evidence base is also reviewed, along with some of the difficulties, both scientific and political, inherent in research in this area.

      CAT evolved initially as a brief (usually 16‐session) therapy. This was partly for pragmatic reasons and related to the search for the optimum means of delivering an effective treatment to the kind of patients being seen in under‐resourced health service settings. However, it also arose from consideration and evaluation of which aspects of therapy, including its duration, were actually effective. This aspect of research is fundamental to the model and continues to be important in its continuing evolution. We suggest, incidentally, that a brief treatment like CAT, within the course of which profound psychological change can be achieved, genuinely merits the description of “intensive” as opposed to much longer‐term therapies usually described as such, which we suggest might better be called “extensive.”

      A further reason for the present book is the ever increasing popularity of CAT with mental health professionals and the demand from trainees and others for a comprehensive СКАЧАТЬ