From a leading clinician-researcher, this book presents an empirically tested approach for helping clients with severe and chronic depression by directly tackling negative rumination. Rumination-focused cognitive-behavioral therapy (RFCBT) combines carefully adapted elements of CBT with imagery, visualization, and compassion-based techniques. The book provides everything needed to implement this 12-session approach, including numerous sample dialogues, a chapter-length case example, reflections and learning exercises for therapists, and 10 reproducible client handouts. Purchasers get access to a Web page where they can download and print the reproducible materials in a convenient 8½" x 11" size. Reviews: RFCBT is a natural and useful extension of CBT that is applicable to many, if not most, chronically or recurrently depressed individuals. Watkins has translated lessons from the laboratory and clinical work into a well-formulated, clearly described intervention. In addition to drawing on CBT and behavioral activation, RFCBT incorporates many unique and original strategies. It helps patients to develop effective alternatives to habitual and dysfunctional ruminative patterns, and to become more 'concrete' and actively oriented toward problem solving instead of abstract, reflective, and passive."— Hammen, PhD, Distinguished Research Professor, Departments of Psychology and Psychiatry and Biobehavioral Sciences, University of California, Los Angeles "Rumination is the hallmark feature of depression, implicated in its maintenance and recurrence. The treatment so eloquently presented in this book fills a significant gap for clinical practice. Written by the leading researcher in the field and based on an extensive corpus of basic and applied research, this book offers a comprehensive and thoroughly validated approach. The techniques offered will serve as an important resource for clinicians for many years to come."— Barnhofer, PhD, Heisenberg Fellow, Free University of Berlin "Watkins has identified a critical but often overlooked factor in the treatment of mood disorders. Rumination is a central feature of depression, and is arguably the primary mediator of the maintenance of the disorder. A book that focuses on targeting rumination in treatment is sorely needed, and Watkins has delivered a masterful volume that is insightful, thorough, and accessible. This is an essential guide for anyone who treats depressed patients."— E. Ingram, PhD, Professor and Director of Clinical Training, Department of Psychology, University of Kansas "Written by an internationally recognized expert, this book provides a highly accessible and engaging review of the phenomenology, etiology, assessment, and treatment of rumination. Practical, evidence-based treatment strategies are supplemented with rich clinical transcripts that illustrate the moment-by-moment intricacies of intervention. The techniques in this manual empower patients to go beyond the content of their thoughts to address the process and form of rumination. Clinicians at every level of expertise will benefit from this excellent volume."— J. A. Dozois, PhD, Professor and Director, Clinical Psychology Graduate Program, University of Western Ontario, Canada Contents: I. Rumination Processes in Psychopathology and Treatment 1. Why a Treatment Targeting Rumination? 2. Understanding Rumination 3. Key Components and Principles of RFCBT II. Rumination-Focused Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy 4. Initial Assessment 5. Therapy Rationale and Goal Setting 6. Functional Analysis of Rumination 7. Choosing Treatment Interventions 8. Practice at Developing Interventions: Addressing Difficulties and Hurdles 9. Shifting Processing Style: Becoming Concrete and Specific 10. Shifting Processing Style: Absorption 11. Shifting Processing Style: Compassion III. Application and Extension of RFCBT 12. A Case of RFCBT from Beginning to End 13. Adaptations of RFCBT Appendix. Handouts References Index About the Author: Edward R. Watkins, PhD, CPsychol, is Professor of Experimental and Applied Clinical Psychology at the University of Exeter, United Kingdom, and Director of the Mood Disorders Centre and the Study of Maladaptive to Adaptive Repetitive Thought (SMART) Lab. He has practiced as a cognitive-behavioral therapist for 20 years, specializing in depression. His research focuses on the experimental understanding of psychopathology in depression-with a particular focus on repetitive negative thought and rumination-and the development and evaluation of new psychological interventions for mood disorders. Dr. Watkins is a recipient of the British Psychological Society's May Davidson Award for outstanding contributions to the development of clinical psychology within the first 10 years of his career. |