Cognitive Therapy of Anxiety Disorders

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370 TREATMENT OF SPECIFIC ANXIETY DISORDERS


These goals are achieved by the use of cognitive restructuring and exposure-based
behavioral interventions that target the specific maladaptive thought content and inter-
pretative biases specified in the cognitive case formulation (see Table 9.6). There are six
treatment elements to cognitive therapy of social phobia (see also Butler & Wells, 1995;
D. M. Clark, 2001; Turk et al., 2008; Wells, 1997).


Education, Goal Setting, and Hierarchy Construction


The first couple of treatment sessions focus on educating the client into the cognitive
model of social phobia. Information obtained from the diagnostic interview, self- report
questionnaires, and the self- monitoring forms assigned for the case formulation are
used to develop the client’s personal idiosyncratic version of the cognitive model (refer
to Figure 9.1).
During the education phase the cognitive therapist uses guided discovery to illus-
trate important features of the cognitive model by identifying biased cognitive pro-
cesses associated with recent experiences of social anxiety. It is important that indi-
viduals learn about the three phases of social anxiety and the role that overestimated
appraisals of the likelihood and consequences of social threat play during anticipation,
exposure, and postevent recall of social situations. In addition the deleterious effects
of heightened self- focused attention, awareness of inhibitory behaviors, and failure to
process external social information should be explained, as well as the maladaptive
effects of safety or concealment behaviors. The cognitive therapist will also discuss
how an overly negative interpretation and recall of one’s social performance as well
as assumptions about making a negative impression on others will increase feelings
of anxiousness in social settings. It is explained that long-held negative beliefs and
assumptions about one’s ability and effectiveness in relating to others can increase
vulnerability to social anxiety. Finally, a treatment rationale must be included as part
of the education phase. Clients are told that practice in identifying and correcting
faulty thinking, the adoption of more positive approaches to anxiety, and gradual but
repeated exposure to feared social situations are critical elements of treatment. With


table 9.7. treatment goals in Cognitive therapy for social phobia
••Reduce anticipatory anxiety by correcting social threat interpretation bias and preventing
avoidance of anxiety-provoking social situations.
••Counter excessive self-consciousness during social exposure by re-directing information
processing toward positive external social cues.
••Eliminate safety strategies employed to conceal and reduce anxiety.
••Strengthen anxiety tolerance and a more adaptive, coping perspective.
••Reduce inhibition, improve social skills, encourage a more realistic standard of performance,
and develop a balanced self-evaluation of social performance.
••Eliminate post-event rumination and encourage more adaptive reappraisals of past social
performance and its effects.
••Modify core beliefs about personal vulnerability in social interaction, the threat of negative
evaluation by others, and the self as social object.
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