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The efficacy of behavioural couples therapy and emotionally focused therapy for couple distress
Author(s)
Date Issued
2004-12
Date Available
2013-12-04T11:38:18Z
Abstract
Twenty treatment outcome studies, 13 of which evaluated behavioral couples therapy (BCT) and seven of which evaluated emotionally focused therapy (EFT) were reviewed, leading to the following conclusions. BCT leads to short and long-term gains for moderate to severe couple distress. In the long term BCT probably leads to no better outcomes than its constituent components—behavioral exchange training and communication and problem solving skills training. Addition of a cognitive therapy component to BCT or the use of a variety of treatment formats does not improve the efficacy of BCT. Integrative couples therapy and insight-oriented marital therapy may be more effective than BCT, but studies supporting this conclusion require replication. EFT leads to short and long-term gains for mild to moderate couple distress. Addition of a cognitive therapy component to EFT does not enhance its efficacy. EFT may be more effective than problem solving therapy and less effective than integrated systemic therapy, but the two studies supporting this conclusion require replication.
Type of Material
Journal Article
Publisher
Springer
Journal
Contemporary Family Therapy
Volume
26
Issue
4
Start Page
361
End Page
387
Copyright (Published Version)
2005, Kluwer Academic Publishers-Human Sciences Press
Language
English
Status of Item
Peer reviewed
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
File(s)
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Name
COuple_therapy_Review_2004x.pdf
Size
460 KB
Format
Adobe PDF
Checksum (MD5)
0c5654ab08cca343a3cc3efe4bd41168
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