Metacognitive Therapy for Anxiety and Depression
G**E
Effective for sufferers of clinical depression or anxiety
This book presents a therapeutic approach to depression and anxiety called Meta Cognitive Therapy. It targets therapists as its primary audience but, although I am not a therapist, it was recommended to me by a friend who was cured from depression by this therapy. It did help me to overcome a trauma that had developed into a depressive state.The idea behind the Meta Cognitive Therapy is that anxiety disorders and depression come from thought processes that persist long after a trauma or an initial fear as inadequate responses to it, and therefore perpetuate or even aggravate it into a dysfunctional state of clinical depression or anxiety. For example, the victim of a bank robbery suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder is caught in the thought process that he/she must constantly pay attention to danger in order to avoid being a crime victim again. Constant worry and accompanying rituals and ruminations paralyze him/her.The therapy consists in a cognitive dialogue with the therapist and practical cognitive techniques/exercises that help the patient to change his/her response to these thought processes. One technique, for example, is to learn how to put oneself into an observer role and view one's obsessive negative thoughts as what they are: thoughts than can pass. Another technique is an analytical dialogue in which the therapist helps the patient to uncover the reality of his/her thought processes: how they arise from wrong beliefs (for example 'I can prevent crime by constantly paying attention to my environment" or "I am defined by a past trauma", how they negatively affect the patient, etc. One ground principle is that one can prevent thoughts from escalating into negative obsessions by letting them pass, not by fighting them.The therapy can be relatively brief (8 weeks). Clinical trials have shown very positive results.Different chapters present a detailed therapy roadmap illustrated by clinical cases for each of the major forms of anxiety and depression including generalized anxiety, obsessive-compulsive disorder and posttraumatic stress disorder. I found that the general principles of the therapy related well to now popular philosophical approach of Mindfulness (see "The Power of Now" by Eckart Tolle and many Buddhist and non Buddhist Mindfulness writings). It was also interesting in its own right to learn more about depression and anxiety as they affect so many people.Two remarks:- the book overuses acronyms such as MCT, PTSD and many more.- it includes many figures that are not properly visualized on the Kindle
I**E
Metacognitive Therapy for Anxiety and Depression
I cannot say enough good things about Metacognitive Therapy for Anxiety and Depression. I saw many psychiatrists, psychologists and over 35 years in January 2009 I discovered Metacognitive Therapy and three months later I've reduced my anxiety to normal levels. It's not a miracle, it's a direct benefit of putting together the knowledge from this book and practicing the techniques described. I've contacted my friends with anxiety and/or depression as this is the best resource I've seen to overcome anxious and depressive conditions.I was intrigued with the book from page one, "Thoughts don't matter, but your response to them does: as everyone has negative thoughts but not everyone believes their negative thoughts and develops anxiety." I've read the book three times and I've phoned all my friends and family members with anxiety and/or depression to please read this book.Metacognitive therapy (MCT) does not question the reality of a person's individual thoughts and beliefs; it focuses on how to change a person's response to the thought. It cuts to the chase of the how to overcome anxious thinking and provides the tools to disengage from intrusive thoughts (called mental events) while providing a step by step method of how to reduce anxiety to normal levels.Before reading this book, I thought that my worry kept me safe, protected me from danger and I firmly believed it was impossible for me to stop worrying. I worried all day, everyday and half the night. I was existing, not living. Thanks to MCT I now experience anxious thoughts in metacognitive mode and view the thought as an event in the mind and as such, I do not have to pay attention to it resulting in no more worry! I cannot recommend this book highly enough. I hope that MCT becomes better known in the US (the author is from England) as it has the potential to help millions.
S**K
Not just a first taste in MCT - not for general readers
The book provides the lastest research in MCT and an in-depth discussion of the approach as a generic first-line therapy. In spite of not being a practitioner, I have read the book out of professional interests. I would say some parts can be technical if the reader does not have any background.
A**Y
Amazing resource and potential breakthrough for many mental disorders
I am very impressed with Dr. Wells methodic, thoughtful approach to psychological disorder treatment. His aim to create a holistic framework for general treatment is coherent. I’m excited for how his work will continue impacting his field. Treating metacognition gets to the real source of mental suffering and helps patients understand their disorder so they can play an active role in healing themselves.
R**.
good info
Some of this is beyond my scope of practice and it's better suited for somebody like a therapist but that't my fault for not doing more research into it. Overall though It still is a great book and I would highly suggest it.
A**Y
good book
Good book. Good info for my practice. Another way of thinking to promote critical thinking skills when CBT therapy is not concrete enough especially for anxious adolescents still developing executive functioning.shipping so very slow! Two weeks for media mail.
B**L
Highly Recommended
Fantastic book describing the theories, interventions and treatment plans for anxiety and depression using a metacognitive model. Highly recommended to any healthcare professional who is seeking a metacognitive understanding of anxiety or depression, or a guideline on how to treat these disorders using a metacognitive approach.
J**E
Four Stars
really good and thorough walkthrough by the metacognitive method
G**O
One Giant Leap for Mankind!
Over the last ten years I have gone through many of the different counselling programmes on offer through the NHS, including basic counselling, trauma counselling, CBT and Beat the Blues- not to mention the thousands spent on private treatments. Some of these treatments offered short term improvements, but none provided long lasting gains I could retain.The physical response of my anxiety was so great, at one point I had to have an operation to enable me to urinate properly. The heart palpitations perfectly mimicked what I imagine having a heart attack would be like and the constantly active mind (worry) sent me into bouts of spiralling depression with no escape in sight.My search for a cure to what started off as Obsessive Compulsive Disorder (OCD) and later developed into the broader Generalised Anxiety Disorder (GAD) led me to a book called `Cognitive Therapy of Anxiety Disorders' (same author), which in turn led to this current publication.The book is very well written and there is minimal technical jargon in it. It is aimed at practitioners, rather than to be used as a self-help guide, but, nonetheless after some time spent slowly digesting the relevant chapters, massive gains can be achieved.The concepts are logical and the content is fairly straight forward after the initial understanding. There are individual rating scales, treatment plans and process diagrams for GAD, OCD, PTSD and MDD, plus more general chapters which detail the common themes.There are examples of behaviour, which I could immediately relate to and begin to question my own behaviours. Hypothetical questions gave me something productive to think about, stimulated recovery and enabled me to see the bigger picture. There are experiments to challenge unhelpful beliefs and enable new, more helpful counter evidence to generate a `new plan' for processing information.The book clearly describes the technique of `Detached Mindfulness', which is a key component to the therapy. This allows thoughts to be treated as `events in the mind', rather that actively engaging with them in the first place. This means that the content of thoughts and worries is largely irrelevant and things can be treated in a more logical problem solving manner.I cannot rate this book highly enough. From a personal perspective it has turned my life around and the future (which wasn't looking too promising) is now looking bright. In my opinion, the NHS fails to successfully treat conditions like mine and advances such as this have the potential to save large amounts of money- I'm sure I have cost the tax-payer a small fortune unnecessarily, when treatments such as this could be available.Since I picked the book up eighteen months ago, I have unravelled my condition back to the route cause and come off all medication, that included a maximum dose of the beta blocker propranolol. I have travelled to Australia on my own, done a sky dive, a bungee jump and climbed Mount Kilimanjaro......,things that GAD suffers may believe will never be possible for them.My condition is more complex and I am under the care of a clinical psychologist to round off my own progress, but I believe a full recovery is only a matter of time.Thanks again to Professor Wells, at al, and I hope this review is useful to whoever reads it. Good luck and best wishes.
P**E
Great book
Great book for therapists or anyone looking for a better understanding of how to deal with various psychological problems. For therapists it is as good as a training course, a great buy.
J**B
Great resource for clinicians
Builds on the more traditional CBT approaches and complements the more in depth discussions that are typical in therapy sessions.
D**D
Good
Interesting
D**N
State-of-the art evidence-based therapy
When I heard Prof. Wells talk recently he emphasised the difference between his metacognitive therapy (MCT) approach and traditional CBT. Although Beck's latest manual for anxiety disorders (Clark & Beck, 2010) incorporates elements of Wells' approach to metacognition, Wells seems to be saying that he thinks it's too integrative and that a truly scientific and testable treatment needs to be able to isolate its active ingredients. Wells also seems to be saying that trying to mix MCT and CBT leads to problems for the client and may cause contradictions in treatment that damage the outcome. Anyway, this is a superb book, it's very well-written and surprisingly easy to get into. As protocols for treatment go, these are very clear and easy to follow. In fact the whole approach, simplifies CBT considerably, and provides a credible and coherent system of treatment, derived from empirically-derived principles.Donald Robertson, author of, The Philosophy of Cognitive-Behavioural Therapy (CBT): Stoic Philosophy as Rational and Cognitive Psychotherapy The Discovery of Hypnosis: The Complete Writings of James Braid the Father of Hypnotherapy The Practice of Cognitive-Behavioural HypnotherapyThe Philosophy of Cognitive-Behavioural Therapy (CBT): Stoic Philosophy as Rational and Cognitive PsychotherapyThe Discovery of Hypnosis: The Complete Writings of James Braid the Father of HypnotherapyThe Practice of Cognitive-Behavioural Hypnotherapy
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