Skip to main content
Search type Search syntax
Tags [tag]
Exact "words here"
Author user:1234
user:me (yours)
Score score:3 (3+)
score:0 (none)
Answers answers:3 (3+)
answers:0 (none)
isaccepted:yes
hasaccepted:no
inquestion:1234
Views views:250
Code code:"if (foo != bar)"
Sections title:apples
body:"apples oranges"
URL url:"*.example.com"
Saves in:saves
Status closed:yes
duplicate:no
migrated:no
wiki:no
Types is:question
is:answer
Exclude -[tag]
-apples
For more details on advanced search visit our help page
Results tagged with
Search options questions only not deleted user 5006

For questions focusing on therapies to develop personal coping strategies that target solving of current problems and changing unhelpful patterns in cognitions (e.g. thoughts, beliefs, and attitudes), behaviors, and emotional regulation. If your question involves only one of thoughts, beliefs, attitudes, behavior, emotion, memory, attention, language, decision-making, or perception, then use the associated specialized tag instead of CBT.

1 vote
0 answers
56 views

Does CBT indirectly resolve core issues? [duplicate]

(I don't expect that it would do so as successfully as interventions that aim to do so directly, but:) From the outside, it seems CBT ignores the root causes of the issue, some may say building on sand … (I'm pretty sure there's some such expression but I can't recall it) My question is, does CBT actually help resolve core issues (any belief/emotional response a clinical psychologist might see as detrimental …
user1999728's user avatar