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11 Cards in this Set

  • Front
  • Back
Common Factorism
seeks strategies that all therapy schools might share.
Effectiveness
Refers to what is offered to and received by people in the everyday world.
Efficacy
What we determine from a controlled Randomized Clinical Trial, typically conducted in an academic research setting.
Multimodal therapy
a cognitive-behavioral therapy introduced by Arnold Lazarus, which employs techniques from diverse approaches in an effort to help people make positive changes in their BASIC IB: behavior, affects, sensations, images, cognitions, interpersonal relationships, and biological functioning.
Paradoxical Interventions
A therapeutic strategy that asks patients to increase or observe the frequency or intensity of a symptom, for example, having anxious patients make themselves more anxious or note when and how severely they become anxious
Reactance
Resistance to efforts by another to change the person.
Stepped Care
beginning with the least time consuming and costly treatment and enhancing treatment only when necessary.
Technical Elclecticism
therapist works within a particular theoretical framework, ex, therapist uses cognitive behavior therapy but sometimes imports from other orientations techniques deemed effective without subscribing to the theories that spawned them.
Theoretical Integration
tries to synthesize not only techniques but theories.
Therapeutic (working) Alliance
Refers to rapport and trust and to a sense that the therapist and the pt are working together to achieve mutually agreed-upon goals.
Triadic Reciprocality
the influence of cognition and behavior on each other through the relationships among thinking, behavior, and the environment.