As a clinical psychology student, I have found it useful to apply multiple case formulations from different schools of therapy (e.g., CBT, ACT, Schema Therapy) to the same client. Not only has this practice enhanced my understanding of the individual client, but has also served as an example of Dr. Goldfried’s argument that many schools of therapy rely on similar psychological principles. Thank you for this informative episode on case formulation!
Could you share where you found the information on how these schools form their case formulation? So far I have Beck's on CBT and Mcwilliams' on psychoanalytic case formulation. Also have you written down your thoughts on how these therapies rely on similar principles somewhere?
As a clinical psychology student, I have found it useful to apply multiple case formulations from different schools of therapy (e.g., CBT, ACT, Schema Therapy) to the same client. Not only has this practice enhanced my understanding of the individual client, but has also served as an example of Dr. Goldfried’s argument that many schools of therapy rely on similar psychological principles. Thank you for this informative episode on case formulation!
Could you share where you found the information on how these schools form their case formulation? So far I have Beck's on CBT and Mcwilliams' on psychoanalytic case formulation. Also have you written down your thoughts on how these therapies rely on similar principles somewhere?
Love to see both of you in the act of original thinking.
The first real debate, it was great, and you both came back to each other, healthy.
I love these conversations.
Greetings
I would like to know how do I formulate using solution focus brief therapy because it does not focus on the problem?
Great debate!
Wish they would just stick to the topic 🙄