Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT)
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What Is Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT)?
In the 1960s, Dr. Aaron Beck, known as the father of cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT), developed this life-changing therapy. Since then, it’s become one of the most common evidence-based treatments for mental health conditions and eating disorders. Cognitive behavioral therapy focuses on how thoughts, emotions, and behaviors relate to each other and how changing the way someone evaluates a situation can change their reactions. It’s an evidence-based treatment for mental health conditions designed to change the damaging thought patterns and negative emotions that some people develop about themselves. These destructive belief systems can lead to unhealthy coping strategies like substance abuse, self-harm, and eating disorders.
Cognitive behavioral therapy can be beneficial either by itself or in combination with other types of therapy in treating eating disorders and other mental health conditions. However, not all individuals who benefit from cognitive behavioral therapy have mental health conditions or eating disorders. Cognitive behavioral therapy can be an effective tool to help anyone learn how to better manage stressful situations, deal with emotional challenges, and improve their mental health and well-being. CBT can be utilized by mental health professionals in either individual therapy sessions or group therapy sessions.
Overview of Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT)
Is Cognitive Behavioral Therapy Effective?
Several studies show that cognitive behavioral therapy is a popular talk therapy alternative to medication when it comes to treating eating disorders and other mental health disorders like anxiety disorders. Studies have also found that cognitive behavioral therapy can be as effective in treating depression as prescription antidepressants. Unlike medication, which simply aims to eliminate the symptoms of the mental health conditions, cognitive behavioral therapy focuses on the whole person by addressing the individual’s underlying core beliefs, dysfunctional assumptions, and negative automatic thoughts.
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy and Negative Thoughts
The basis of cognitive behavioral therapy is that situations themselves don’t upset people, but rather the meaning that people give those situations. If an individual has negative thoughts, they can’t see that their perception doesn’t fit. They continue to have the same thoughts and fail to learn new things. A depressed person, for instance, might think when they wake up that they can’t face going to work. They might believe that they feel awful and that nothing will go right. If they stay home from work because of these thoughts, they won’t find out if their beliefs are wrong. Their thoughts may develop further and lead them to believe that they’re useless, weak, and a failure.
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These negative thoughts can even trigger negative emotions and behaviors, making individuals feel bad about themselves. In this case, these negative emotions may also make them more likely to avoid going to work. This vicious cycle can occur with other mental health conditions, including eating disorders.
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Cognitive behavioral therapy helps clients recognize these patterns and teaches them to step away from their automatic negative thoughts and test them first. With the depressed individual, for example, cognitive behavioral therapy would encourage them to examine real-life situations to see what happens. The goal of cognitive behavioral therapy is to correct these distorted beliefs.
The Three Basic Principles of Cognitive Behavioral Therapy
- Core Beliefs: Core beliefs are deeply held beliefs that an individual believes about themself, about others, and about the world. They learned these beliefs early in life and hold them as absolute. One example is an individual believing “I’m incompetent.”
- Dysfunctional Assumptions: Dysfunctional assumptions are rigid, unrealistic rules for living adopted by individuals. One example is the idea that “it’s better not to try than to risk failing.”
- Negative Automatic Thoughts: Negative automatic thoughts are thoughts that are automatic or involuntarily activated in challenging situations. One example of a negative automatic thought is an individual automatically thinking “My friend didn’t call me today; she must be angry with me,” without a rational basis for that thought.
Therapies That Utilize Cognitive Behavioral Therapy
- Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT): Dialectical behavior therapy helps individuals improve their emotional health by addressing destructive/disturbing thoughts and behaviors while incorporating treatment strategies such as emotional regulation and mindfulness.
- Multimodal Therapy: This therapy suggests that mental health disorders should be treated by addressing seven different but interconnected modalities: behavior, affect, sensation, imagery, cognition/thoughts, interpersonal factors, and biological considerations.
- Rational Emotive Behavior Therapy (REBT): REBT helps individuals identify their self-defeating thoughts, challenge those thoughts, and replace them with more adaptive beliefs.
- Exposure Response and Prevention Therapy (ExRP): This type of therapy is a specific modality of cognitive behavioral therapy that targets obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) and anxiety disorders. ExRP helps individuals with OCD and anxiety disorders address their intrusive, compulsive, obsessive, and ruminating thoughts.
CBT Techniques for Eating Disorders
We utilize cognitive behavioral therapy in combination with other therapies to treat anorexia disorder, binge eating disorder, bulimia disorder, compulsive exercise disorder, other specified feeding or eating disorder (OSFED), unspecified feeding or eating
disorder (UFED), co-occurring substance use disorder, and dual diagnosis mental health disorders.
Cognitive Therapy Programs at Magnolia Creek
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy Benefits
- The Teaching Aspect: Typically, when using cognitive behavioral therapy, the therapists at Magnolia Creek don’t interpret the client’s eating disorder or explore the psychodynamics of their history. Cognitive behavioral therapy isn’t simply a talk therapy, but rather it’s a psychological therapy during which clients learn how to improve their mental health by changing their thinking and making better decisions. Our therapists help each client learn about the relationships between their thoughts, feelings/emotions, and behaviors.
- Structured Therapy: Cognitive behavioral therapy takes a structured approach rather than being a free-flowing talk therapy. Each client’s therapy sessions have a specific structure, and each session builds on the previous. Additionally, during CBT sessions, clients don’t have to explore their childhood, talk about how their week is going, etc. unless it helps them work on the current skill that they’re learning and practicing.
- Homework: At Magnolia Creek, our therapists utilize homework assignments as part of cognitive behavioral therapy to reinforce what the clients learn during each session, and clients are given tasks to practice in their everyday lives. Then with the help of therapists, our clients work on fine tuning their techniques during sessions and are provided with assignments aimed at helping them with any skills they’re struggling with.
REVIEWED BY
Kate Fisch, LCSW
If you’d like to learn more about how cognitive behavioral therapy can help you, call us or fill out our contact form today.
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