A comparison of attachment outcomes in enactment-based versus therapist-centered therapy process modalities in couple therapy.
Attachment issues are viewed by many therapists as lying at the heart of couple distress. It is critical to empirically validate therapy processes that facilitate couples in responding to each other's attachment needs. This study examined enactments as a therapy process and change mechanism to promote secure attachment in couple therapy. Sixteen couples were randomly assigned to 1 of 2 experimental groups--1 group received 3 therapist-centered sessions followed by 3 enactment-based sessions, and a second group received 3 enactment-based sessions followed by 3 therapist-centered sessions. To measure between-session and within-session change, each spouse completed presession and postsession measures of attachment security each week. Results showed that couples who received enactment-based sessions first reported greater increases in attachment security than those receiving therapist-centered sessions first. These same couples continued to show improvement after switching to the therapist-centered sessions. Conversely, couples who received therapist-centered sessions first did not increase attachment after switching to enactment-based sessions. For wives, enactment-based sessions produced the greatest improvement in attachment, yet both therapy process modalities led to some improvement. Conversely, for husbands, attachment improved only when they received enactment-based sessions first. Enactment-based sessions may therefore be more important for husbands than wives. Overall, with some qualification it appears that enactment-based therapy process may improve attachment more than a therapist-centered process. These observed trends and findings are generally consistent with previous research supporting use of enactments in couple therapy.
Attachment security changes for each couple during first three
sessions: Couples receiving
enactment treatment first compared to couples receiving
therapist-centered treatment first: mean
difference = 131.04, t = 2.71, p = o.05.
·
Attachment security changes for each couple during final three
sessions: Couples who received
enactment treatment first compared to couples who received
therapist-centered treatment first: mean
difference = 108.08, t = 2.15, p = o.05.
1. What kind of research design is this?
2. Identify the treatment variables.
3. How many groups are there?
4. What statistical method should be used?
5. Interpret these results:
A comparison of attachment outcomes in enactment-based versus therapist-centered therapy process modalities in couple therapy. Attachment...
Risk management in Information Security today Everyday information security professionals are bombarded with marketing messages around risk and threat management, fostering an environment in which objectives seem clear: manage risk, manage threat, stop attacks, identify attackers. These objectives aren't wrong, but they are fundamentally misleading.In this session we'll examine the state of the information security industry in order to understand how the current climate fails to address the true needs of the business. We'll use those lessons as a foundation...
10. The Beck & Watson article is a
Group of answer choices
quantitative study
qualitative study
11. Beck & Watson examined participants' experiences and
perceptions using what type of research design?
Group of answer choices
particpant obersvation
phenomenology
12. Select the participants in the Beck & Watson study
Group of answer choices
Caucasian women with 2-4 children
Caucasian pregnant women
13. In the Beck & Watson study, data was collected via
a(n)
Group of answer choices
internet study
focus group...
14. Select the number of participants in the Beck & Watson
study
Group of answer choices
8
13
22
35
15. Beck & Watson determined their final sample size via
Group of answer choices
coding
saturation
triangulation
ethnography
16.Through their study, Beck & Watson determined
Group of answer choices
after a traumatic birth, subsequent births have no troubling
effects
after a traumatic birth, subsequent births brought fear, terror,
anxiety, and dread
Subsequent Childbirth After a Previous Traumatic Birth Beck, Cheryl...