Introducing Cognitive Analytic Therapy. Anthony Ryle
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СКАЧАТЬ The model arose from a continuing commitment to research into effective therapies and therapy integration, and from a concern with offering appropriate, time‐limited treatment in the public sector. Originally developed as a model of individual therapy, CAT now offers a general theory of development and psychotherapy with applicability to a wide range of conditions in many different settings and in various “contextual” and systemic approaches.

      In order to locate cognitive analytic therapy (CAT) in the still expanding array of approaches to psychotherapy and counseling and to indicate the continuing developments in its theory and practice, its main features will be briefly summarized in this introductory chapter.

      The process of integration in CAT originated in the use of cognitive methods and tools to research the process and outcome of psychodynamic therapy. This involved the translation of many traditional psychoanalytic concepts into a more accessible language based on the new cognitive psychology. This led on to a consideration of the methods employed by current cognitive‐behavioral and psychodynamic practitioners. While cognitive‐behavioral models of therapy needed to take more account of the key role of human relationships in development, in psychopathology, and in therapy, their emphasis on the analysis and description of the sequences connecting behaviors to outcomes and beliefs to emotions made an important contribution. Psychoanalysis overall offered three main important understandings, namely its emphasis on the relation of early development to psychological structures, its recognition of how patterns of relationship derived from early experience are at the root of most psychological distress and difficulty, and its understanding of how these patterns are repeated in, and may be modified through, the patient–therapist relationship.

      Neither cognitive nor psychoanalytic models, however, appeared to acknowledge adequately the extent to which individual human personality or the “Self” is formed and maintained through relating to and communicating with others and through the internalization of the meanings developed in such relationships, meanings which reflect the values and structures of the wider culture. In CAT, the Self is seen to be developed, constituted, and maintained through such interactions.

      The practice of CAT reflects these theoretical developments. It has been suggested that, in contrast to the traditional polarization of health care professionals between those who are good at “doing to” their patients (e.g., surgeons and perhaps some behavior therapists) and those who are good at “being with” their patients (e.g., many dynamic psychotherapists or nurses involved in long‐term care), the CAT therapist aims to be good at doing with their patients (Kerr, 1998a). This highlights the fact that CAT involves hard work and commitment for both patients and therapists, and also the fact that much of this work is done together and that the therapy relationship itself plays a major role in assisting change.

      The historic failure of psychodynamic therapists to evaluate seriously the efficacy and effectiveness of their work and their resistance to doing so, partly for understandable reasons, led in the past to a lack of serious support in the NHS (National Health Service) in the UK for therapy in general. It appears also to have contributed, paradoxically, to the current frequently indiscriminate and uninformed application of an “evidence‐based” paradigm, important as evidence is, that is crude and problematic given the multidimensional complexity of mental disorder and treatments for it, and also given the increasing recognition of “common factors” in effective therapies and treatments (Castonguay & Beutler, 2006; Gabbard, Beck, & Holmes, 2005; Greenberg, 1991; Lambert, 2013; Norcross, 2011; Parry, Roth, and Kerr, 2005; Roth & Fonagy, 1996; Wampold & Imel, 2015). The outcome research that led on to the development of CAT pre‐dated these developments, originating in a program dating back to the 1960s that aimed to develop measures of dynamic change. While the “formal” research base for CAT remains relatively slender (Calvert & Kellett, 2014), the evolution of the model over the last 30 years has been accompanied by a continuous program of largely small‐scale but important research into both the process and outcome of therapy, and also the use and evaluation of CAT in contextual or consultancy type approaches, and this continues on an expanding scale. In addition, a number of more “formal” randomized controlled trials have been successfully undertaken in recent years, notably for “borderline personality”‐type disorders (see Chapter 10). One consistent research finding has been the apparently superior effectiveness of CAT in engaging “difficult” or “hard to help” patients' of whatever diagnosis, and retaining them in treatment (Calvert & Kellett, 2014).

      Most CAT therapists in the UK and СКАЧАТЬ