Cbt Case Studies

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The patient is a 65- year- old, heterosexual, upper middle class, a Caucasian female who has fought esophageal cancer for the past year and a half. The patient’s married with two adult children. She resides at home with her husband and has an exceptionally supportive immediate family, friends, and relatives. Patient has an older sister whom she is very close to. She reports having a job that she takes great pleasure in. Patient has experienced a difficult time coping with her cancer diagnosis. However, the patient is cancer free as of a month ago. Currently, the patient is experiencing great difficulty addressing the aftereffects of cancer, such as physical changes and anxiety due to the health circumstances.
The patient becomes extremely
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The patient has an extremely supportive family, relatives, and friends. She has hobbies that she can identify and participate in. She is financially stable which has allowed her to receive quality cancer treatment. The patient is able to be independent and carry out all daily living tasks.
Two Interventions CBT is a psychosocial intervention that has extensive research proving the effectiveness of a wide range of psychosocial issues (González-Prendes, & Brisebois, 2012). I prefer to use CBT because it keeps the client active in the change process. CBT works effectively in the outpatient hospital setting because it is short-term. CBT is a way to challenge distorted thoughts such as black and white thinking, overgeneralization, discounting the positive, mind-reading, “should” statements and personalizing then replace those thoughts with more adaptive thoughts that reflect the whole picture of a situation (Chi,2016).
My patient is experiencing persistent negative thinking and I hope for CBT to help reframe those thoughts. In an outpatient cancer center, there is not a set amount of time that patients will be visiting the hospital for which means I need to have an effective short-term therapy in place. CBT can ensure I’ll work with patients effectively in a few sessions. CBT works well in this
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The patient I am working with is experiencing negative thoughts, all or nothing thinking, fixation on physical appearance, hopelessness, re-experiencing trauma of when the doctor told her she, in fact, had cancer and overgeneralization. CBT is based around the idea that a person’s thoughts are the main determinant of emotional and behavioral responses to life events (González-Prendes, & Brisebois,