ABSTRACT

The Cognitive Behavioural Analysis System of Psychotherapy (CBASP) is the only psychotherapy model  developed specifically for chronic depression. In the latest addition to the successful Distinctive Features series, the developer of CBASP, James P. McCullough Jr., along with Elisabeth Schramm and J. Kim Penberthy, provides an accessible introduction to this approach, showing how it differs from other cognitive behavioural approaches, and highlighting those features – both theoretical and practical – that make it unique.

The unparalleled problems of the chronically depressed patient are some of the most difficult that practitioners face. The disorder has usually continued for a decade or more and patients enter psychotherapy interpersonally withdrawn, detached and with little or no motivation to change. CBASP as A Distinctive Treatment for Persistent Depressive Disorder provides a new look into the phenomenological world of the patient and shows the reader why the world-view of the patient is a valid perception of reality.

CBASP is designed to address the problems of the patient in a step-by-step manner. This book explores the therapist role and shows how the CBASP model enables therapists to address the patient’s depression in a zone of interpersonal safety. Patients are taught how to behave in an interpersonally facilitative manner and shown how everything they do has consequences for others (including the therapist) and on the social environment in which they live. CBASP as A Distinctive Treatment for Persistent Depressive Disorder will be essential reading for novice and experienced CBT therapists, counselors and psychotherapists treating chronic depression.

part I|60 pages

Distinctive Theoretical Features of the CBASP Model

chapter 1|6 pages

Distinctive history of CBASP

chapter 6|2 pages

Distinctive goals of CBASP treatment

chapter 13|3 pages

Participant role of the patient in CBASP

part II|80 pages

The Practical/Clinical Features of CBASP

chapter 16|4 pages

Unique procedure of CBASP to diagnose PDD

chapter 25|4 pages

Situational analysis example: Case one

chapter 29|6 pages

CBASP case description (Part A)

chapter 30|5 pages

CBASP case discussion (Part B)