4.4 • 856 Ratings
🗓️ 8 May 2017
⏱️ 48 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
This is the last live therapy podcast with Mark, the physician who was convinced he was a failure as a father because of his difficulties forming a close, loving relationship with his oldest son. Although the session appeared to go well, we can’t be sure until we see Mark’s end of session mood ratings on the Daily Mood Log and on the Brief Mood Survey and and Evaluation of Therapy Session. David emphasizes that therapists’ perceptions of patients are notoriously inaccurate, but most therapists are unaware of this because they don’t use the rigorous testing procedures at the start and end of sessions.
To review Mark's partially completed Daily Mood Log, CLICK HERE. Jill and David will ask him to complete the additional negative thoughts on his own after the session.
To review mark's end of session Brief Mood Survey and Evaluation of Therapy Session, CLICK HERE.
After David review’s the phenomenal changes Mark reported from the start to the end of the session, David asks if the ratings were genuine, or, as some listeners might suspect, faked in order to try to please the therapists. Mark bursts into tears and says, in a choked voice, that it was a life-changing experience.
After the end of the session, David and Fabrice discuss a number of highlights from the work with Mark:
There are many resources for listeners who want to learn more about TEAM-CBT, including:
Click on a timestamp to play from that location
0:00.0 | Hello and welcome to the Feeling Good podcast. |
0:12.4 | I am your host, Fabrice Knight. |
0:14.7 | And joining me here in the Murrieta Studios is Dr. David Burns. |
0:19.0 | Hi, David. |
0:20.0 | Hi, Fabrice. |
0:23.8 | Dr. David Burns has been a pioneer in the development of cognitive therapy, and he is the creator of the new team therapy. He is the author of |
0:30.2 | Feeling Good, which has sold over 5 million copies in the United States, and has been translated into |
0:35.5 | over 20 languages. He is an emeritus adjunct clinical professor of psychiatry at the Stanford University School |
0:43.0 | of Medicine. |
0:44.7 | This is episode 35 of the Feeling Good podcast, and we are on the last segment of the live session |
0:53.8 | with our patient, Mark, and the masterful |
0:59.0 | facilitation by David and Jill. |
1:03.0 | And so David, can you briefly describe what this last segment is going to be about? |
1:09.0 | Well, the last segment is going to be going back to testing. |
1:12.6 | It's team, CBT, testing, empathy, agenda setting methods. |
1:17.4 | We've been through all of that. |
1:18.6 | And then testing again. |
1:19.9 | We come back to the end of session testing. |
1:21.9 | And this is something that very few therapists do. |
1:25.9 | And I believe that all therapists should do the before and end of session testing at every session with every patient because you have an idea how you did in this session. |
1:37.8 | Yeah. |
1:38.8 | But my research and clinical experience has shown that the perceptions of therapists can be way off-base and usually are. |
... |
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