Cards (8)

    • What did March et al., (2007) find about CBT?

      Effective in reducing symptoms of depression and preventing relapse
    • How March’s study support the effectiveness of CBT and its practical application?
      Suggests that CBT may acts as a long-term solution in targeting the root cause of the disorder rather than just the symptoms
    • Why is it disadvantageous that CBT is only effective in treating moderate levels of depression?
      CBT requires an hour of 5-20 sessions; counter-intuitive as abolition is a core symptom of depression, making patient unable to attend therapy
    • What is a better solution to treating severe depression?
      Anti-depressants in order to relief symptoms so that patients are able to attend therapy
    • What did Wampold (2006) find about CBT?

      It is not the treatment itself, but rather the therapist-patient relationship that makes the therapy effective
    • How does therapist-patient relationships make CBT more effective?
      Having the opportunity to talk to someone who will listen could be what matters the most; undermining the importance of CBT and any difference to other forms of psychotherapy
    • Why might the cognitive approach not be treating depression effectively?
      It is too simplistic in its explanation; a stress-diathesis approach is more effective as it states that genetic vulnerability for depression is what causes faulty information thinking (and faulty information thinking that causes depression)
    • Discuss cognitive treatments to depression (16 marker)
      AO1: CBT
      AO1: REBT
      AO3 (+): March et al., (2007)
      AO3 (-): Counter-intuitive
      AO3 (-): Wampold (2006)
      AO3 (-): Simplistic
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