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The Journal of Psychotherapy Practice and Research logoLink to The Journal of Psychotherapy Practice and Research
. 1996 Summer;5(3):202–212.

Psychodynamic Therapists' Reservations About Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy

Implications for Training and Practice

JACQUELINE B PERSONS 1, JAMES J GROSS 1, MARK S ETKIN 1, SIMONE K MADAN 1
PMCID: PMC3330422  PMID: 22700289

Abstract

This article offers suggestions for psychodynamic therapists who encounter obstacles while learning cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) or working in settings where CBT is used. The authors discuss three types of questions commonly raised by psychodynamic therapists about CBT. These concern 1) the therapeutic relationship, 2) the focus of therapeutic interventions, and 3) the depth of change. To help psychodynamic therapists overcome obstacles to learning CBT, the authors focus on similarities between psychodynamic and cognitive-behavioral models in these three areas. They also examine differences between the models, including differences dependent on value judgments, and offer suggestions for making productive use of differences between the models in the training process.

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