2009
DOI: 10.1080/10615800902833770
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Metacognitive therapy for anxiety and depression

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Cited by 7 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…Although variation exists between cognitive behavioral therapies (CBTs), a shared assumption among the underlying treatment models is that psychopathology is, in part, characterized by maladaptive cognitive processes which contribute to emotional dysfunction (Mennin, Ellard, Fresco, & Gross, 2013). Accordingly, clinical improvement is fostered via cognitive change, and many forms of CBTs for GAD have targeted worry through the building of healthier metacognitive skills (e.g., Clark & Beck, 2010;Mennin & Fresco, 2014;Roemer & Orsillo, 2009;Wells, 2009). In particular, decentering and reappraisal are two metacognitive skills, routinely practiced in CBT packages, considered to represent healthier metacognition.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Although variation exists between cognitive behavioral therapies (CBTs), a shared assumption among the underlying treatment models is that psychopathology is, in part, characterized by maladaptive cognitive processes which contribute to emotional dysfunction (Mennin, Ellard, Fresco, & Gross, 2013). Accordingly, clinical improvement is fostered via cognitive change, and many forms of CBTs for GAD have targeted worry through the building of healthier metacognitive skills (e.g., Clark & Beck, 2010;Mennin & Fresco, 2014;Roemer & Orsillo, 2009;Wells, 2009). In particular, decentering and reappraisal are two metacognitive skills, routinely practiced in CBT packages, considered to represent healthier metacognition.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…CBTs have successfully treated GAD, demonstrating moderate to large effects during the acute phase of GAD treatment that are largely maintained throughout follow-up (Cuijpers et al, 2014;Hayes-Skelton, Roemer, & Orsillo, 2013;Mennin, Fresco, O'Toole, & Heimberg, 2018;Wells et al, 2010). Although metacognitive skills are considered crucial in producing change in these treatments for GAD (e.g., Clark & Beck, 2010;Roemer & Orsillo, 2009;Mennin & Fresco, 2014;Wells, 2009), much is yet to be understood in terms of why these treatments work. Indeed, factors responsible for change during these treatments are important to identify as they can point to pathways of improving therapeutic strategies so they more directly target change-potent components (Kazdin, 2014).…”
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confidence: 99%
“…This is in general agreement with previous studies where the “need to control thoughts” and “lack of cognitive confidence” can effectively predict addictive behavior ( Spada et al, 2015 ). Among them, positive and negative metacognitive beliefs play different roles in Internet addiction ( Veeraraghavan, 2009 ).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This makes it a critical set of skills for coping with mental distress and emotions such as anxiety, sadness, and frustration. Metacognitive therapy , for example, is based on the principle that metacognition is key to understanding how cognition operates and how people understand and experience the world around them [ 12 ]. Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) [ 13 ] is based on a model in which emotions are consequences of people’s thoughts and replacing maladaptive thoughts with adaptive ones can help people cope with emotions (cognitive restructuring, reappraisal, or meta-reasoning).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%