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Effects of four treatment methods on social phobic patients not suitable for insight‐oriented psychotherapy
60
Citations
15
References
1984
Year
PsychotherapyMental HealthTarget PhobiaPsychologyTreatment MethodsSocial SciencesClinical PsychologyBehavior ModificationCognitive TherapyPsychoanalytic PsychotherapyExperimental PsychopathologyBasal TherapyPsychiatrySocial Phobic PatientsInsight‐oriented PsychotherapyBehavior TherapyRelaxation TherapyCounselling PsychologyIndividual TherapyCognitive Behavioral InterventionMindfulnessSocial AnxietyTherapyMedicineAnxiety DisordersPsychopathology
Forty-two social phobic men and women, rated unsuitable for insight-oriented psychotherapy, received one of four randomly assigned types of treatment for 3 months. All patients received basal therapy (B) in the form of standardized information, self-exposure instructions, and anxiolytic medication. One group received this treatment only, with monthly appointments. The others, in addition, received either therapist-directed prolonged exposure in vivo, in some cases supplemented with exposure in imagination (PE), dynamically oriented supportive therapy (ST) or relaxation therapy (R). There was a 9 months' follow-up period. The phobia variables were more improved in the PE and ST groups than in the R and B groups at the termination of treatment. Although improvement had deteriorated somewhat in the PE group during follow-up, the improvement in target phobia was better than in the other groups. There were almost no improvements in the R and B groups. ST and PE groups also showed improved social function while the global rating showed most improvement in the PE group. The B group was not improved at all and the R group only showed a short-lived drop in muscular tension.
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