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Self-exposure Instructions by Telephone With a Severe Agoraphobic: A Case Study

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 June 2009

Ian Taylor
Affiliation:
Senior Clinical Psychologist, University Hospital of Wales, Heath Park, Cardiff

Extract

This case study explores the therapeutic usefulness of self-exposure instructions by telephone. With very little contact (2 h 20 min over 11 weeks), the agoraphobic client made considerable progress in traveling by bus and shopping in crowded stores. As he lived a considerable distance from the hospital and could not have attended for regular out-patient sessions, a home-based programme would have been the only other alternative. This would have been much less cost-effective.

Type
Clinical Section
Copyright
Copyright © British Association for Behavioural and Cognitive Psychotherapies 1984

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References

Marks, I. M. and Mathews, A. M. (1979). Brief standard self-rating for phobic patients. Behaviour Research and Therapy 17, 263267.Google Scholar
Mathews, A. M., Gelder, M. G. and Johnston, D. W. (1981). Agoraphobia: Nature and Treatment. London: Tavistock Publications.Google Scholar
McDonald, R., Sartory, G., Grey, S. J., Cobb, J., Stern, R. and Marks, I. (1979). The effects of self-exposure instructions on agoraphobic out-patients. Behaviour Research and Therapy 17M, 8385.Google Scholar
Taylor, I. (1983). The reactive effect of self-monitoring of target activities in agoraphobics: a pilot study. Submitted for publication.Google Scholar
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