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TakedownIf you consider content in White Rose Research Online to be in breach of UK law, please notify us by emailing eprints@whiterose.ac.uk including the URL of the record and the reason for the withdrawal request. Objectives: 'Exits' in cognitive analytic therapy (CAT) are methods that change unhelpful patterns or roles during the final 'revision' phase of the therapy. How exits are conceived and achieved is currently poorly understood. This study therefore focused on the revision stage of CAT to explore and define how change is accomplished.
Methods:Qualitative content analysis studied transcripts of sessions six and seven of a protocol delivered eight-session CAT for the treatment of depression. Eight participants met the study inclusion criteria and therefore sixteen sessions were available for analysis.
Results:The exit model developed contained three distinct (but interacting) phases; (1) developing an observing self via therapist input or client self-reflection, (2) breaking out of old patterns by creating new roles and procedures and (3) utilisation of a range of methods to support and maintain change. Levels of inter-rater reliability for the exit categories making up the model were good.Conclusions: The revision stage of CAT emerged as a complex and dynamic process involving three interacting stages. Further research is indicated to understand how exits relate to durability of change and whether change processes differ according to presenting problem.
Key Practitioner Messages: Exit work in CAT is a dynamic process that requires progression through stages of insight, active change and consolidation. Development of an 'observing self' is an important foundation stone for change and CAT therapists need to work within the client's zone of proximal development. A number of processes appear important in facilitating change such as attending to the process and feelings of change. Cognitive analytic therapy (CAT) is an integrative therapy that draws on personal construct (Kelly, 1955) and object relations theory (Ryle, 1985), and is based on the principle that mental representations of self, others and the world are developmentally formed by early interactions with significant others (Ryle & Kerr, 2002). CAT assimilates associated psychoanalytic and cognitive methods to offer a transdiagnostic, time-limited and relational approach to facilitating therapeutic change (Ryle & Kerr, 2002). The model therefore anticipates that the client will relate to the therapist as they did with significant others in their ...