Contrasting Two Clients in Emotion-Focused Therapy for Depression 2: The Case of "Eloise," "It's Like Opening the Windows and Letting the Fresh Air Come In"

Authors

  • Rhonda N. Goldman
  • Jeanne C. Watson
  • Leslie S. Greenberg

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.14713/pcsp.v7i2.1093

Keywords:

emotion, case study, experiential therapy, depression, randomized clinical trials (RCTs), emotion-focused therapy (EFT), case studies, clinical case studies, comparative case studies

Abstract

This paper presents a good-outcome case of "Eloise," an individual drawn from the York II Depression study and treated with emotion-focused therapy (EFT) (Goldman, Greenberg, & Angus, 2006). Using the case comparison method, this study considers data from an observer-rated measure of emotional processing during therapy, the client's perceptions of change as measured by post-session and post-therapy questionnaires, the therapist's perceptions of change as measured by post-session reports, and post-therapy interview data, to form an understanding of factors that contributed to change. Eloise's case study is designed to compare and contrast with Watson, Goldman, and Greenberg's (2011) case study of Tom, a poor-outcome case drawn from a similar RCT. The Eloise and Tom case studies extend and build upon the cases presented by the authors of Case Studies in Emotion-Focused Treatment of Depression: A Comparison of Good and Poor Outcome (Watson, Goldman, & Greenberg, 2007), which consist of three good outcome and three poor outcome clients compared and contrasted using the case-comparison method.

Author Biographies

Rhonda N. Goldman

Dan Fishman, Ph.D. Editor-in-Chief, Pragmatic Case Studies in Psychotherapy Professor of Clinical and Organizational Psychology Graduate School of Applied and Professional Psychology Rutgers University Mailing address: 57 Jaffray Court Irvington, NY 10533 914-693-8549 fax: 603-917-2567 email: dfish96198@aol.com

Jeanne C. Watson

Jeanne C. Watson

Leslie S. Greenberg

Leslie S. Greenberg

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Published

2011-06-04

Issue

Section

Emotion-Focused Therapy for Depression