The Theory and Practice of Group Psychotherapy (111 page)

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Authors: Irvin D. Yalom,Molyn Leszcz

Tags: #Psychology, #General, #Psychotherapy, #Group

BOOK: The Theory and Practice of Group Psychotherapy
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10
K. MacKenzie and V. Tschuschke, “Relatedness, Group Work, and Outcome in Long-Term Inpatient Psychotherapy Groups,”
Journal of Psychotherapy Practice and Research
2 (1993): 147–55. G. Burlingame, “Small-Group Treatment.” D. Kivligham, “Helpful Impacts.”

11
A. Goldstein,
Therapist-Patient Expectancies in Psychotherapy
(New York: Pergamon Press, 1962). S. Bloch et al., “Patients’ Expectations of Therapeutic Improvement and Their Outcomes,”
American Journal of Psychiatry
133 (1976): 1457–59. J. Frank and J. Frank,
Persuasion and Healing: A Comparative Study of Psychotherapy,
3rd ed. (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1991), 132–54. J. Connelly et al., “Premature Termination in Group Psychotherapy: Pretherapy and Early Therapy Predictors,”
International Journal of Group Psychotherapy
36 (1986): 145–52. A. Rabin et al., “Factors Influencing Continuation,”
Behavioral Therapy
23 (1992): 695–98. H. Hoberman et al., “Group Treatment of Depression: Individual Predictors of Outcome,”
Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology
56 (1988): 393–98. M. Pearson and A. Girling, “The Value of the Claybury Selection Battery in Predicting Benefit from Group Therapy,”
British Journal of Psychiatry
157 (1990): 384–88. W. Piper, “Client Variables,” in
Handbook of Group Psychotherapy,
ed. A. Fuhriman and G. Burlingame (New York: Wiley, 1994): 83–113.

12
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American Psychologist
50 (1995): 965–74.

13
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American Journal of Psychiatry
159 (2002): 122–29.

14
D. Spiegel and C. Classen,
Group Therapy for Cancer Patients
(New York: Basic Books, 2000). M. Leszcz and P. Goodwin, “The Rationale and Foundations of Group Psychotherapy for Women with Metastatic Breast Cancer,”
International Journal of Group Psychotherapy
48 (1998): 245–74.

15
Goldstein,
Therapist-Patient Expectancies
, 35–53. Kaul and Bednar, “Experiential Group Research,” 229–63. E. Uhlenhuth and D. Duncan, “Some Determinants of Change in Psychoneurotic Patients,”
Archives of General Psychiatry
18 (1968): 532–40. Frank and Frank,
Persuasion and Healing.

16
Lieberman and Borman,
Self-Help Groups.

17
K. Lorig et al., “Evidence Suggesting That a Chronic Disease Self-Management Program Can Improve Health Status While Reducing Hospitalization: A Randomized Trial,”
Medical Care
37 (1999): 5–14.

18
F. Fawzy, N. Fawzy, and J. Wheeler, “A Post-Hoc Comparison of the Efficiency of a Psychoeducational Intervention for Melanoma Patients Delivered in Group Versus Individual Formats: An Analysis of Data from Two Studies,”
Psycho-Oncology
5 (1996): 81–89. A. Bandura,
Self-Efficacy: The Exercise of Control
(New York: Freeman, 1997).

19
J. Moreno, “Group Treatment for Eating Disorders,” in Fuhriman and Burlingame,
Handbook of Group Psychotherapy
: 416–457
.

20
S. Gold-Steinberg and M. Buttenheim, “‘Telling One’s Story’ in an Incest Survivors’ Group,”
International Journal of Group Psychotherapy
43 (1993): 173–89. F. Mennen and D. Meadow, “Process to Recovery: In Support of Long-Term Groups for Sexual Abuse Survivors,”
International Journal of Group Psychotherapy
43 (1993): 29–44. M. Schadler, “Brief Group Therapy with Adult Survivors of Incest,” in
Focal Group Therapy,
ed. M. McKay and K. Paleg (Oakland, Calif.: New Harbinger Publications, 1992), 292–322.

21
J. Kelly, “Group Therapy Approaches for Patients with HIV and AIDS,”
International Journal of Group Psychotherapy
48 (1998): 145–62. C. Rose, L. Sekula, and E. Rubenstein, “Group Interventions for Widowed Survivors of Suicide,”
Suicide and Life-Threatening Behavior
31 (2001): 428–41.

22
P. Tsui and G. Schultz, “Ethnic Factors in Group Process,”
American Journal of Orthopsychiatry
58 (1988): 136–42.

23
N. Hansen, F. Pepitone-Arreola-Rockwell, and A. Greene, “Multicultural Competence: Criteria and Case Examples,”
Professional Psychology: Research and Practice
31 (2000): 652–60. G. Nagayama Hall, “Psychotherapy Research with Ethnic Minorities: Empirical, Ethical, and Conceptual Issues,”
Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology
69 (2001): 502–10.

24
M. Jones, “Group Treatment with Particular Reference to Group Projection Methods,”
American Journal of Psychiatry
101 (1944): 292–99.

25
L. Marsh, “Group Therapy and the Psychiatric Clinic,”
Journal of Nervous and Mental Diseases
82 (1935): 381–90.

26
M. Galanter, “Zealous Self-Help Groups as Adjuncts to Psychiatric Treatment: A Study of Recovery, Inc.,”
American Journal of Psychiatry
143 (1988): 1248–53. M. Galanter, “Cults and Zealous Self-Help Movements,”
American Journal of Psychiatry
145 (1990): 543–51. C. Gartner, “A Self-Help Organization for Nervous and Former Mental Patients—Recovery, Inc., Chicago,”
Hospital and Community Psychiatry
42 (1991): 1055–56.

27
P. Murray, “Recovery, Inc., as an Adjunct to Treatment in an Era of Managed Care,”
Psychiatric Services
47 (1996): 1378–81.

28
A. Low,
Mental Health Through Will Training
(Boston: Christopher Publishing House, 1950).

29
Lieberman and Borman,
Self-Help Groups,
194–234. G. Goodman and M. Jacobs, “The Self-Help Mutual Support Group,” in Fuhriman and Burlingame,
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: 484–526
.
D. Salem, E. Seidman, and J. Rappaport, “Community Treatment of the Mentally Ill: The Promise of Mutual Help Organizations,”
Social Work
33 (1988): 403–8. Lieberman and Borman,
Self-Help Groups.

30
H. Fensterheim and B. Wiegand, “Group Treatment of the Hyperventilation Syndrome,”
International Journal of Group Psychotherapy
41 (1991): 399–404. R. McNally, “Psychological Approaches to Panic Disorder: A Review,”
Psychological Bulletin
108 (1990): 403–19.

31
S. Tenzer, “Fat Acceptance Therapy: A Non-Dieting Group Approach to Physical Wellness, Insight and Self-Acceptance,”
Women and Therapy
8 (1989): 39–47.

32
Moreno, “Group Treatment for Eating Disorders.”J. Mitchell et al., “A Comparison Study of Antidepressants and Structured Intensive Group Therapy in the Treatment of Bulimia Nervosa,”
Archives of General Psychiatry
47 (1990): 149–57. J. Laube, “Why Group for Bulimia?”
International Journal of Group Psychotherapy
40 (1990): 169–88. D. Franko, “The Use of a Group Meal in the Brief Group Therapy of Bulimia Nervosa,”
International Journal of Group Psychotherapy
43 (1993): 237–42.

33
M. Kalb, “The Effects of Biography on the Divorce Adjustment Process,”
Sexual and Marital Therapy
2 (1987): 53–64. D. Grenvold and G. Welch, “Structured Short-Term Group Treatment of Postdivorce Adjustment,”
International Journal of Group Psychotherapy
29 (1979): 347–58.

34
S. Drob and H. Bernard, “Time-Limited Group Treatment of Genital Herpes,”
International Journal of Group Psychotherapy
36 (1986): 133–44.

35
D. Ornish,
Dr. Dean Ornish’s Program for Reversing Heart Disease
(New York: Random House, 1990). R. Allen and S. Scheidt, “Group Psychotherapy for Patients with Coronary Heart Disease,”
International Journal of Group Psychotherapy
48 (1998): 187–214.

36
B. Mara and M. Winton, “Sexual Abuse Intervention: A Support Group for Parents Who Have a Sexually Abused Child,”
International Journal of Group Psychotherapy
40 (1990): 63–78.

37
T. Poynter, “An Evaluation of a Group Program for Male Perpetrators of Domestic Violence,”
Australian Journal of Marriage and Family
12 (1991): 64–76. J. Edelson and R. Gruznski, “Treating Men Who Batter,”
Journal of Social Service Research
12 (1988): 3–22. B. Wallace and A. Nosko, “Working with Shame in the Group Treatment of Male Batterers,”
International Journal of Group Psychotherapy
43 (1993): 45–61.

38
I. Yalom and S. Vinogradov, “Bereavement Groups: Techniques and Themes,”
International Journal of Group Psychotherapy
38 (1988): 419–46.

39
S. Levine et al., “Group Psychotherapy for HIV-Seropositive Patients with Major Depression,”
American Journal of Psychotherapy
55 (1991): 413–25. G. Tunnell, “Complication in Group Psychotherapy with AIDS Patients,”
International Journal of Group Psychotherapy
41 (1991): 481–98. A. Beckett and J. Rutan, “Treating Persons with ARC and AIDS in Group Psychotherapy,”
International Journal of Group Psychotherapy
40 (1990): 19–30. Kelly, “Group Therapy Approaches for Patients with HIV and AIDS.”

40
S. Price, A. Heinrich, and J. Golden, “Structured Group Treatment of Couples Experiencing Sexual Dysfunction,”
Journal of Sex and Marital Therapy
6 (1981): 247–57.

41
L. Gallese and E. Treuting, “Help for Rape Victims Through Group Therapy,”
Journal of Psychosocial Nursing and Mental Health Services
19 (1981): 20–21.

42
R. Kris and H. Kramer, “Efficacy of Group Therapy with Postmastectomy Self-Perception, Body Image, and Sexuality,”
Journal of Sex Research
23 (1986): 438–51.

43
E. Herman and S. Baptiste, “Pain Control: Mastery Through Group Experience,”
Pain
10 (1981): 79–86.

44
S. Abbey and S. Farrow, “Group Therapy and Organ Transplantation,”
International Journal of Group Psychotherapy
48 (1998): 163–86.

45
Z. Segal, J. Williams, and J. Teasdale,
Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy for Depression
(New York: Guilford Press, 2002).

46
J. Kabat-Zinn,
Full Catastrophe Living: Using the Wisdom of Your Body and Mind to Face Stress, Pain, and Illness
(New York: Dell, 1990). Segal et al.,
Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy.

47
V. Helgeson, S. Cohen, R. Schulz, and J. Yasko, “Education and Peer Discussion Group Interventions and Adjustment to Breast Cancer,”
Archives of General Psychiatry
56 (1999): 340–47.

48
I. Yalom, P. Houts, G. Newell, and K. Rand, “Preparation of Patients for Group Therapy: A Controlled Study,”
Archives of General Psychiatry
17 (1967): 416–27.

49
F. Fromm-Reichman,
Principles of Intensive Psychotherapy
(Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1950).

50
J. Ledoux and J. Gorman, “A Call to Action: Overcoming Anxiety Through Active Coping,”
American Journal of Psychiatry
158 (2001): 1953–55.

51
J. Frank et al., “Behavioral Patterns in Early Meetings of Therapy Groups,”
American Journal of Psychiatry
108 (1952): 771–78. C. Peters and H. Grunebaum, “It Could Be Worse: Effective Group Therapy with the Help-Rejecting Complainer,”
International Journal of Group Psychotherapy
27 (1977): 471–80. E. Berne,
Games People Play
(New York: Grove Press, 1964).

52
J. Rubin and K. Locasio, “A Model for Communication Skills Group Using Structured Exercises and Audiovisual Equipment,”
International Journal of Group Psychotherapy
35 (1985): 569–84.

53
J. Flowers, “The Differential Outcome Effects of Simple Advice, Alternatives, and Instructions in Group Psychotherapy,”
International Journal of Group Psychotherapy
29 (1979): 305–15.

54
W. Beardslee, E. Wright, P. Rothberg, P. Salt, and E. Versage, “Response of Families to Two Preventive Intervention Strategies: Long-Term Differences in Behavior and Attitude Change,”
Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry
35 (1996): 774–82.

55
S. Holmes and D. Kivlighan, “Comparison of Therapeutic Factors in Group and Individual Treatment Processes,”
Journal of Counseling Psychology
47 (2000): 478–84.

56
Frank and Frank,
Persuasion and Healing.

57
V. Frankl,
The Will to Meaning
(Cleveland: World Publishing, 1969).

58
S. Folkman, S. Greer, “Promoting Psychological Well-being in the Face of Serious Illness: When Theory, Research and Practice Inform Each Other,”
Psycho-Oncology
9 (2000): 11–19.

59
L. Ormont, “The Role of the Leader in Resolving Resistances to Intimacy in the Group Setting,”
International Journal of Group Psychotherapy
38 (1988): 29–45.

60
D. Goleman,
Emotional Intelligence
(New York: Bantam Books, 1995).

61
S. Barlow et al., “Leader Communication Style: Effects on Members of Small Groups,”
Small Group Behavior
13 (1982): 513–81.

62
S. Borgers, “Uses and Effects of Modeling by the Therapist in Group Therapy,”
Journal for Specialists in Group Work
8 (1983): 133–39.

63
E. Kuipers et al., “London–East Anglia Randomized Controlled Trial of Cognitive-Behaviour Therapy for Psychosis: I. Effects of the Treatment Phase,”
British Journal of Psychiatry
171 (1997): 319–27.

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