|
Shire Psychology and Counselling Connecting with children, adolescents & adults
|
|
|
Emotionally Focused Therapy (EFT)"EFT
is a short term (8-20 sessions), structured approach to couples therapy
formulated in the early 80's by Sue Johnson and Les Greenberg. EFT is also used
with families. A substantial body of research outlining the effectiveness of EFT
now exists.
Research studies find that 70-75% of couples move from distress to recovery and
approximately 90% show significant improvements. The major contraindication for
EFT is on-going
violence in the relationship. EFT is being used with many different kinds of
couples in private practice, university training centres and hospital clinics
and many different cultural groups. These distressed couples include partners
suffering from disorders such as depression, post traumatic stress disorders and
chronic illness.
Goals
of Emotionally Focused Therapy
A
Snapshot of the Change Process He
moves from "There is no point in talking to you. I don't want to
fight." to "I do want to be close. I want you to give me a chance.
Stop poking me and let me learn to dance with you." His
wife’s critical anger then expands into fear and sadness. She can now ask for
and elicit comfort. New cycles of bonding
interactions occur and replace negative cycles such as pursue-withdraw or
criticise-defend. These positive cycles then become self-reinforcing and create
permanent change.
Copyright: The Center for Emotionally Focused Therapy http://www.eft.ca/about/about.htm
|
|
Send mail to
webmaster@shirepsych.com.au with
questions or comments about this web site.
|