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The spouse as co-therapist in the treatment of agoraphobia
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1984
Year
Family MedicineMarried PatientsControlled StudyPsychiatryMedicineAgoraphobic SymptomsCouple PsychologyEducationMarital TherapyFamily PsychologyBehavior TherapyTherapeutic RelationshipCouple TherapyMental HealthFamily TherapyPsychotherapyRelationship CounselingPsychopathology
Involving the spouse as a co-therapist made no significant difference to the outcome of treatment in a controlled study of 19 married patients suffering from agoraphobia who were engaged in short-term home-based behavioural treatment. Improvement continued to 6-month follow-up. The marriages of those with some marital difficulties at the start tended to improve, whether or not the spouse was involved. Poor initial marital adjustment was not related to the degree of improvement in agoraphobic symptoms.