Let's Talk about CBT- Research Matters Podcast Por Steph Curnow for BABCP arte de portada

Let's Talk about CBT- Research Matters

Let's Talk about CBT- Research Matters

De: Steph Curnow for BABCP
Escúchala gratis

Acerca de esta escucha

The podcast that brings you all the latest CBT research published in the BABCP Journals2024 Ciencia Ciencias Sociales Hygiene & Healthy Living Psicología Psicología y Salud Mental
Episodios
  • Is it time for a more individual approach to adolescent eating disorder treatment – with Dr Daniel Wilson
    Apr 16 2025
    In this episode of Let’s Talk about CBT- Research Matters, Steph speaks with Dr Daniel Wilson, a clinical psychologist and researcher based in Brisbane, Australia. Dan is the lead author of the paper “CBT-E following discontinued FBT for adolescents with eating disorders: time for a more individual approach?” published in The Cognitive Behaviour Therapist. Steph and Dan explore key findings from the study, which compared the effectiveness of CBT-E (enhanced cognitive behavioural therapy) for young people who had previously discontinued FBT (family-based treatment) versus those who had not tried FBT at all. The research offers important insights into treatment options for adolescents with eating disorders and highlights the value of providing alternative pathways to recovery. Links & Resources: Read the paper: “CBT-E following discontinued FBT for adolescents with eating disorders: time for a more individual approach?” - https://bit.ly/3Eysxd0 Explore more from the Cognitive Behaviour Therapist Find our sister podcasts and all our other episodes in our podcast hub here: Have feedback? Email us at podcasts@babcp.com Follow us on Instagram & Bluesky: @BABCPpodcasts Credits: Music is Autmn Coffee by Bosnow from Uppbeat Music from #Uppbeat (free for Creators!): https://uppbeat.io/t/bosnow/autumn-coffee License code: 3F32NRBYH67P5MIF Transcript: Steph: Hello and welcome to Let’s Talk about CBT- Research Matters, the podcast that explores some of the latest research published in the BABCP journals with me Steph Curnow. Each episode, I'll be talking to a recently published author about their research, what was the motivation behind it and how they hope it will impact the world of CBT. In this episode, I’m talking to Dr Daniel Wilson. Dan is lead author on the paper CBT-E following discontinued FBT for adolescents with eating disorders: time for a more individual approach? Which was published in the Cognitive Behaviour Therapist. Hi Dan. Welcome to the podcast. Dan: Thank you very much. Thanks for having me. Steph: It's really exciting to have you on. Actually, you are our first guest from Australia. So would you like to tell the listeners a little bit about yourself, maybe where you work and your research areas? Dan: Yep. Sure. So I'm a clinical psychologist. I'm from Brisbane, Australia, and my work here in Brisbane, I do a little bit of a mix. So I am working at Children's Health Queensland at a specialist eating disorders clinic for our child and youth mental health service and I work clinically there as part of the CBT-E team. I'm on a research fellowship for the last two years and we're researching eating disorders generally and what factors contribute to treatment outcomes amongst adolescent eating disorders. And also do a little bit of work in private practice as well. Steph: Okay, brilliant, thank you. So I was really keen to get you on the podcast. It was Eating Disorders Awareness Week here in the UK a couple of weeks ago. And, as we just talked about off air, we also recorded a Practice Matters podcast with Rebecca Murphy, which you said you listened to as well for Eating Disorders Week, talking all about it. So I thought this would intersect really nicely with that. We don't actually get many eating disorders papers into the journal as well, so I thought it'd be really nice to showcase this one and talk about what you do. So could you tell us a little bit about how this paper came about? Was there any particular motivation for the research? Dan: Yeah, so I guess in part, it was on behalf of our young people, on behalf of the treatments that we offer as well. I think unfortunately still with all the evidence we've got with treatment with eating disorders, sometimes they can get a bit of a bad rap. Not so much within our service, but they can be perceived as people that are hard to treat, or the treatments don't work, or people don't recover, despite there being like really good evidence for outcomes. And so what in particular we noticed as well was with family-based treatment, it's a treatment that a lot of people have heard of. It's probably the most well studied treatment for adolescent eating disorders and when it's not going well or it hasn't completely worked, then that kind of perception that, oh, they're not going to recover, can be even worse. And sometimes when family-based treatment doesn't go well, it can not look too good. There can be a lot of distress, there can be a lot of like argumentativeness so that the perception- this is very much anecdotally- is well, if they haven't been able to recover with full family support, what hope is there? And that they're not suitable for an individual treatment. But within our service, what we noticed was that when we'd had sort of some young people that hadn't done quite so well with FBT and we gave them a chance for CBT-E, a good proportion of them did really well and engaged really well on the treatment. So we thought that was ...
    Más Menos
    23 m
  • Flashforward Mental Imagery in Adolescents with Dr. Alex Lau-Zhu
    Feb 18 2025
    In this episode of Research Matters, host Steph Curnow talks to Dr. Alex Lau-Zhu, lead author of the paper “Flashforward Mental Imagery in Adolescents: Exploring Developmental Differences and Associations with Mental Health,” published in Behavioural and Cognitive Psychotherapy. Alex discusses his research into flashforward mental imagery—vivid mental pictures of future events that can be intrusive and emotionally powerful. We explore how these flashforwards relate to anxiety in adolescents, why mental imagery isn’t always a focus in CBT, and how young people may benefit from imagery-based interventions. Guest Bio: Dr. Alex Lau-Zhu is an MRC Clinician Scientist Fellow at the University of Oxford's Department of Experimental Psychology and a clinical psychologist supporting young people affected by trauma. His full list of publications and research areas can be found here: https://www.psy.ox.ac.uk/people/alex-lau-zhu Links & Resources: Read the paper: “Flashforward Mental Imagery in Adolescents: Exploring Developmental Differences and Associations with Mental Health” - https://bit.ly/3Eysxd0 Explore more from Behavioural and Cognitive Psychotherapy –https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/behavioural-and-cognitive-psychotherapy Find our sister podcasts and all our other episodes in our podcast hub here: https://babcp.com/Podcasts Have feedback? Email us at podcasts@babcp.com Follow us on Instagram & Bluesky: @BABCPpodcasts Credits: Music is Autmn Coffee by Bosnow from Uppbeat Music from #Uppbeat (free for Creators!): https://uppbeat.io/t/bosnow/autumn-coffee License code: 3F32NRBYH67P5MIF Transcript: Steph: Hello and welcome to Let’s Talk about CBT- Research Matters, the podcast that explores some of the latest research published in the BABCP journals with me Steph Curnow. Each episode, I'll be talking to a recently published author about their research, what was the motivation behind it and how they hope it will impact the world of CBT. Today, I'm talking to Dr. Alex Lau-Zhu, Alex is lead author on the paper “Flash Forward Mental Imagery in Adolescence: Exploring Developmental Differences and Associations with Mental Health” which has been published in Behavioural and Cognitive Psychotherapy. I really enjoyed this chat with Alex. We talked all about his paper, and we also talked about maybe why mental imagery isn't explored so much with adolescents, or even in CBT in general. It's a really interesting listen, so I hope you all enjoy. Hi Alex. Welcome to the podcast. Alex: Hi Steph, thank you for having me. Steph: You’re welcome. So, before we get into talking about your paper, would you mind introducing yourself to the listeners and telling us a little bit about who you are and the areas you work in? Alex: Yeah, of course. I'm currently an MRC clinician scientist fellow at the Department of Experimental Psychology at the University of Oxford, and I also work as a clinical psychologist in our local county in Oxfordshire, supporting young people who are affected by trauma. Steph: Thank you. So we're talking today about the paper that was published in the last issue of Behavioural and Cognitive Psychotherapy, which is about flash forward mental imagery in adolescents. So could you tell us a bit about how this paper came about? Was there any particular motivation for the research? Alex: Yeah so I work with a lot of young people in my clinical work and often find that they sometimes struggle with expressing themselves, sometimes around identifying what goes on in their minds in particular, which is really a key part of doing CBT, for example. And speaking to other clinicians, also working with young people, it seems like actually sometimes they do find thinking on mental images perhaps a bit easier to thinking about, for example, using visual mediums or drawings to express how they feel and what they think, but sometimes it goes to be around talking about mental images that they experience inside their mind, just describing what is it that they see, what is it that they hear, as a way to then better understand some of those thinking processes or what we might call as distortions in CBT. And that led me to think kind of more broadly around how much do we know about these sorts of processes in young people. And actually, we know incredibly little. There's some really I think exciting work that has happened in the last 20 or 30 years in working with adults and doing CBT with adults around thinking about mental images, not just verbal thinking. But that knowledge somehow hasn't really trickled down to working with young people as much. So I'm really curious more generally in, in understanding mental imagery in young people and whether that can help us improve our treatments. Steph: And would you mind just explaining what flash forwards are for anyone who might not be aware of the term? Alex: Yeah, I think it's probably a term that if once I explain what it means, then you might realise ...
    Más Menos
    29 m
  • ‘Crossing the reflective bridge’: how therapists synthesise personal and professional development from self-practice/self-reflection during CBT training...with Vickie Presley
    Nov 4 2024
    In this episode, host Steph Curnow interviews Vickie Presley, the lead author of a paper titled "Crossing the Reflective Bridge: How Therapists Synthesize Personal and Professional Development through Self-Practice/Self-Reflection (SP/SR) during CBT Training", published in The Cognitive Behaviour Therapist. Vickie shares her insights from the research, discussing the importance of reflective practice in CBT training and how it shapes therapists’ professional growth and personal awareness. If you enjoyed this episode, please rate, review, and subscribe wherever you get your podcasts. Follow us on Twitter at @BABCPpodcasts or on Instagram . Share your feedback or episode suggestions by emailing podcasts@babcp.com. Useful links: The full version of the article being discussed can be found freely available here The SP/SR book that Vickie mentions is “Experiencing CBT from the Inside Out: A Self-Practice/Self-Reflection Workbook for Therapists (Self-Practice/Self-Reflection Guides for Psychotherapists)” by James Bennett-Levy, Richard Thwaites, Beverly Haarhoff, and Helen Perry. Foreword by Christine A. Padesky Credits: Music is Autmn Coffee by Bosnow from Uppbeat Music from #Uppbeat (free for Creators!): https://uppbeat.io/t/bosnow/autumn-coffee License code: 3F32NRBYH67P5MIF Transcript: Steph: Hello and welcome to Let’s Talk about CBT- Research Matters, the podcast that explores some of the latest research published in the BABCP journals with me Steph Curnow. Each episode, I'll be talking to a recently published author about their research, what was the motivation behind it and how they hope it will impact the world of CBT. Today, I'm talking to Vickie Presley. Vickie is course director for CBT training at Coventry university. She's also the lead author of the paper “Crossing the reflective bridge’: how therapists synthesise personal and professional development from self-practice/self-reflection during CBT training” which she co-wrote with Gwion Jones and is published in the Cognitive Behaviour Therapist. Hi, Vickie. Welcome to the podcast. Vickie: Hi Steph, thanks for having me. Steph: Thank you. It's lovely to have you here. I was wondering if you would mind telling everyone a bit about who you are and the areas where you work. Vickie: Yeah, of course. So my name is Vickie, Vickie Presley. I'm currently the lead for psychological therapies training at Coventry University and the course director for our CBT training programme. And I guess outside of my university role, I'm also a CBT therapist and supervisor in private practice. I guess for the purposes of today as well, it'd be important to say I am also Vickie. I am a lady heading quickly towards my 45th birthday. I am a mum. I'm a wife to a long-suffering husband. I'm a sister. I'm an auntie. I'm a great auntie, Lots of things outside of that sort of professional context. And I guess also I'm a nervous wreck today, if I'm honest. I guess just thinking about conveying things around this research, but it just seems important to say that given we're going to talk about sort of how therapists might synthesise their personal and professional development, there's bits about me that might come through today that are about my personal self, not just my professional self. Steph: Great. Thank you. And that's great that you've sort of brought in some of the personal as well. That's really nice. And I'm always nervous when we start doing podcasts as well. So it's fine. And I've been doing this for a while now. Vickie: Oh, that's good to know. Thanks, Steph. Steph: The paper we're going to be talking about today is about self-practice, self-reflection in CBT training but before we get into talking a bit about the paper, would you be able to tell me a bit about how this research came about? What inspired it? Vickie: Yeah, of course. I mean, I suppose the answer to that question is, one that takes me back, sort of, 15 years or so to my own CBT training. So, I trained at Coventry. Coventry's got quite a long-standing ethos of reflective practice as part of the training course. And for me, I think that allowed me to really think about the role of myself in my therapeutic interactions with clients. And I started to notice as part of my training that I was getting in the way sometimes. So sometimes my own stuff was getting in the way of my work with clients. There's this example that I always give where, I was working with a lady who was very, very depressed, and as part of that presentation she was very perfectionist and held herself to really high standards, which, is something that I have to manage myself. So, there's kind of this schema match, I guess, if you like, that we noticed, and we did some work around that. And technically it was really good. Technically we did this continuum exercise. It worked really well, it was really helpful for her in the session. But right in the last minute, I suggested to her that she took the worksheet home, and she...
    Más Menos
    31 m
adbl_web_global_use_to_activate_T1_webcro805_stickypopup
Todavía no hay opiniones