“…Improvement in speech has been demonstrated in stutterers treated by personal construct psychotherapy (Fransella, 1972), who have been found to show a lower relapse rate than those solely treated by speech techniques (Evesham & Fransella, 1985). Changes in construing have been demonstrated during personal construct group psychotherapy for clients with eating disorders (Button, 1987) and for problem drinkers (Landfield, 1979), and this form of therapy has also been found to be effective with disturbed adolescents (Jackson, 1992;Sewell & Ovaert, 1997;Truneckova & Viney, 2005;Viney, Henry & Campbell, 1995), survivors of childhood sexual abuse (Alexander et al, 1989) and people with problems involving poor anger control (Horley & Francouer, 2003;Pekkala & Dave, 2006). Older people have been found to benefit from a personal construct approach (Viney, 1986;Viney, Benjamin & Preston, 1989;Botella & Feixas, 1992-3), as have medical in-patients (Viney et al, 1985a(Viney et al, , 1985b(Viney et al, , 1985c(Viney et al, , 1985d, people with chronic pain , breast cancer survivors (Lane & Viney, 2001), and AIDS caregivers (Viney, Walker & Crooks, 1995) and women attending menopause workshops (Foster and Viney, 2005).…”