1st Edition
Case Studies in Cognitive Behavioural Couple Therapy Couple Narratives
Part One: Major Frameworks for Practice 1. The Tradition of Behavioural Approaches to Couple Therapy 2. Cognitive Behavioural Couple Therapy 3. Integrative Behavioural Couple Therapy Part Two: Case Studies 4. Relationship Distress 5. Intimate Partner Violence and Transition to Parenthood 6. Working with Sexual Issues 7. Working with Sexual Minority Couples 8. Long Term Health Conditions 9. Complexities of Language and Culture: How Not to Get Lost in Translation 10. Depression 1. Hoarding 12. Personality Disorder 13. Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder 14. Infidelity 15. Neurodiversity 16. Substance Misuse and Addictions 17. Endings and Separations Part Three: Concluding Comments 18. The Challenges, Dilemmas, and Rewards of CBT Couple Therapy
Biography
Michael Worrell, PhD, is Consultant Clinical Psychologist at Central and North West London NHS Foundation Trust. Michael has for over a decade been involved in the delivery of training in CBCT for NHS Talking Therapies services. Michael also works with couples in private practice in London. Michael is the author of ‘Cognitive Behavioural Couple Therapy: Distinctive Features’ published by Routledge in 2015.
Dr. Marion Cuddy, DClinPsy, is a clinical psychologist at South London and Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust. She specialises in individual and couple-based CBT for adults experiencing common mental health problems. She has been involved in the training and supervision of therapists for many years and has contributed to a number of publications on couple therapy.
"Books about CBT can sometimes appear formulaic, giving standard accounts of typical, successful therapies. In this book the editors have given the authors scope to craft more varied narratives of couple therapy that capture the essence of working with a variety of problems. By doing so the contributors bring alive ways of working with couples whose experience is often left out of usual training manuals, such as neurodiversity, sexual minority relationships and cross cultural issues. A chapter on separation recognises that a successful outcome of couple therapy may actually be to de-couple. This will be an invaluable resource for any therapists working within the behavioural and couple therapy framework."
Dr Stirling Moorey, MD, Retired Consultant Psychiatrist in CBT






