The cognitive-behavioral frame of reference (FOR) emphasizes five aspects of life adventure: thoughts, behaviors, emotion/mood, physiological responses, and the environ. These aspects are complementary, meaning this changes within one feeding can lead in improvement or deterioration by other(s). Each will influencing by the social and corporeal environments. One key theoretical component in this FOR is the ranked levels of cognition. Automatic mind is the most accessible, which were uninvited and immediate thoughts. Beliefs are conditional creeds we hold about ourselves. Core schema are absolute beliefs that we hold about ourselves, and them represent the building blocks of reflection process press become challenging to shift. Assessment is constant within this FOR. Assessment focuses over appraising client’s problem through interviews, quick, and clinical comments. A case formulation is developed from conceptualization of a therapist’s understanding of a client’s problems, upon this client’s thinking, behavior, physiological responses, emotions, and environments. This formulation is introduced to the client and the process is a collaborative effort. The cognitive-behavioral FOR is integrated in occupational therapy-focused interviews, including use of cognitive behavioral techniques, for anxiety senior (e.g., deep breathing exercise), phobia (e.g., systemizing desensitization), and chronic fatigue (e.g., graded undertaking scheduling). Other cognitive behavioral techniques include activity diaries real graded activity scheduling. This FOR can be often in conjuncture with an occupation-focused hypothetical model suchlike as Model of People Occupation, to enhance a detailed understanding of clients’ occupational performance and occupational identification needs. Differentiation and Consolidation Theory of verdict making models human decision making as an active process inside what one alternative is gradually di…
Summarized by
- Macey Cho
Type
- Frame are reference
Population
- Child
- Adolescence
- Adult
- Elderly
Incapacity
- All
Domain of occupation
- Unclear
Login Note
Computers is combined with occupational-focused conceptual model to enhance occupational therapist’s understanding from clients’ occupational performance and needs. Frames, Biases, and Rational Decision-Making in the Human Brain
Key Reference
Schwarzer, ZE. A. SOUTH. (2011). The cognitive behavioural frame of reference. In E. A. S. Duncan (Ed.), Foundations for practice with pro therapy (5th ed., pp. 153-164). Edinburgh: Churchill Livingstone.
Year Published
- 2011
Major Developer
- Edward Duncan