Journal of clinical psychology
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Twenty-seven chronic pain patients were assigned to one of three treatment groups: hypnosis, cognitive-behavioral, and an attention control. Hypnosis and cognitive-behavioral treatments were identical with the exception of the hypnotic induction. Scores on the McGill Pain Questionnaire (MPQ) and the Activity Log (Fordyce, 1976) were collected at pretreatment, posttreatment, and follow-up intervals. ⋯ Changes for both groups were sustained on the 1-month follow-up. Results of ANCOVAs showed that the cognitive-behavioral treatment resulted in significantly lower pain rating scores than those in the control treatment, but no significant differences were observed between the behavior and hypnosis groups. Findings support the superiority of the cognitive-behavioral treatment on behavior measures and equivalence to hypnosis on subjective measures.
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A study was conducted on how perceptions of a therapist's competence are affected by the therapist's title. Psychiatric inpatients (58 males and 24 females) viewed one of four copies of a videotaped session of the interaction between a male therapist and a male client. ⋯ Of 11 analyses, 1 title effect was found, and females rated the therapist higher on two qualities. Overall, 9 of the qualities showed no effect for title or for ratings by gender.
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The discrepancy between the way individuals perceive themselves and the way they are perceived by their partners has been proposed as an indicator of dyadic adjustment. The present study employed the CPI to investigate the relation of interpersonal perception within dyads and real similarity of spouses to marital satisfaction. The subjects were 20 married couples. ⋯ Conversely, accuracy was related significantly to dyadic adjustment in the case of females, but not males. Real similarity also was correlated positively with dyadic adjustment. Avenues for further research are suggested.
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This study used the Attributional Style Questionnaire to study the attributional styles of depressed and nondepressed chronic low back pain patients (N = 91) in order to test the Revised Learned Helplessness model's prediction of differences between the two. The results partly supported the hypothesis; an internal, stable, global style for negative events distinguished the depressed group from the nondepressed, but there were no differences in attributional style for positive events. ⋯ In addition, the attributional style was not common to all subjects in the depressed group, which suggested that other factors may be involved in the development of different subtypes of depression. Implications for studying attributional aspects of depression and chronic low back pain are discussed.
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Little and Fisher (1958) have demonstrated that the MMPI Hysteria (Hy) scale consists primarily of items that address the denial of psychological problems (the DN scale) and items that involve the admission of physical problems (the AD scale). The traditional interpretation of an elevated Hy score implies that both DN and AD subscales are elevated significantly. ⋯ It was found unwarranted to suggest the presence of hysteroid features on the basis of an elevated HY score unless scales K and HS also were elevated. The value of the HY scale as a measure of psychological denial associated with physical complaints must be considered questionable.