“…For example, healthcare providers who use caregiving, achievement, and self-reliance strategies might benefit from techniques that help them to develop a greater understanding of, and compassion for, their own perspective, personal history, and feelings; correspondingly, they might be harmed by techniques that focus on the perspectives and needs of other people. Conversely, those who use hero, leader, and appealing strategies are more likely to benefit from techniques that help them to track temporal/logical information about events and the effects of their actions on other people; they are unlikely to be helped, and might be harmed, by techniques that focus on emotional expression (Baim, 2020). Approaches based on cognitive-behavioral models might inadvertently focus too much on results and therefore be detrimental for people using 'A' strategies (Schermuly-Haupt et al, 2018) or focus too much on affect-laden images, and therefore exacerbate the problems of people using 'C' strategies (Foa, et al, 2002).…”