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The couple coup

Therapy can work for distressed couples if they want their marriage to work

Updated on: Apr 22, 2010 03:25 PM IST
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The largest, most comprehensive clinical trial of couple therapy ever conducted has found it can help even very distressed married couples — if both partners want to improve their marriage.“It takes only one person to end a marriage but two people to make it work,” said Andrew Christensen, University of California Los Angeles (UCLA) professor of psychology, who led the study.

HT Image
HT Image

The study included 134 married couples, 71 in Los Angeles and 63 in Seattle. Most were in their 30s and 40s, and slightly more than half had children.The couples were “chronically, seriously distressed” and fought frequently, but they were hoping to improve their marriages.“We didn’t want couples who would get better on their own,” Christensen said.

“We wanted couples who were consistently unhappy. We excluded almost 100 couples who wanted couple therapy but who did not meet our criteria of consistent and serious distress.”The couples received 26 therapy sessions within a year. Psychologists conducted follow-up sessions approximately every six months for five years after therapy ended.The two kinds of therapy.

The couples all participated in one of two kinds of therapy. The first, traditional behavioural couple therapy, focuses on making positive changes, including learning better ways of communicating, especially about problems, and better ways of working toward solutions.The second, integrative behavioural couple therapy, uses similar strategies but focuses more on the emotional reactions and not just the actions that led to the emotional reactions.

“Given this population, that’s a good figure,” said Christensen, who has been working with couples in therapy, as well as training and supervising others doing couple therapy for more than 30 years.At that five-year mark, about a third of the couples were “normal, happy couples”, said Christensen, who considers that figure to be quite good, given the serious and persistent distress with which these couples entered treatment, said an UCLA release.

 
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