Brief psychiatric and psychological psychotherapy PKP for anxiety and obsessive-compulsive disorders

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Bibliographic Details
Title: Brief psychiatric and psychological psychotherapy PKP for anxiety and obsessive-compulsive disorders
Authors: Theßen, Lars, Sichort-Hebing, Miriam, Jänsch, Petra, Sulz, Serge K. D.
Publisher Information: EUPEHS Research Centre, 2025.
Publication Year: 2025
Subject Terms: generalised anxiety disorder, AACES, survival rule, obsessive-compulsive disorder, obsessive-compulsive treatment, obsessive thoughts, Behavioural therapy, compulsive actions, agoraphobia, anxiety therapy, panic disorder, brief psychiatric therapy PKP, reaction chain, social phobia
Description: Psychiatric and psychological brief psychotherapy PKP for anxiety and obsessive-compulsive disorders guides you safely through the specific therapeutic measures of evidence-based behavioural therapy. The therapy cards make it possible to go through the individual therapy steps directly with the patient, so that exactly what works takes place. There is a set of cards for all major anxiety disorders - on the front, what to do and on the back, what to bear in mind. Patients really enjoy working with the cards and therapists feel confident in using them. Even if the ring binder is used instead of the cards (with what to do at the top and what is important at the bottom), working with PKP works very well. It starts with a plausible disorder model for the patient, continues with self-observation, preparation of the intervention, its implementation and effectiveness testing.
Document Type: Article
Language: English
DOI: 10.23668/psycharchives.16845
Rights: CC BY
Accession Number: edsair.doi...........455dc23e9596fd74e0fc032f8a344614
Database: OpenAIRE
Description
Abstract:Psychiatric and psychological brief psychotherapy PKP for anxiety and obsessive-compulsive disorders guides you safely through the specific therapeutic measures of evidence-based behavioural therapy. The therapy cards make it possible to go through the individual therapy steps directly with the patient, so that exactly what works takes place. There is a set of cards for all major anxiety disorders - on the front, what to do and on the back, what to bear in mind. Patients really enjoy working with the cards and therapists feel confident in using them. Even if the ring binder is used instead of the cards (with what to do at the top and what is important at the bottom), working with PKP works very well. It starts with a plausible disorder model for the patient, continues with self-observation, preparation of the intervention, its implementation and effectiveness testing.
DOI:10.23668/psycharchives.16845