Cognitive-Behavioral and Existential Therapies for Marital Satisfaction in Women: A Comparative Investigation of the Efficacy, Stability and Mechanisms of Changes

AbstractDue to limited of comparative studies on Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT), as an objective approach, and Existential Therapy (ET), as a subjective approach, on marital relationship, the current study investigates the efficacy of these two types of group psychotherapy on marital satisfaction in women. Hence, the main objects of this study are: comparative study on the efficacy of ET and CBT on marital satisfaction, stability of the intervention after 2 months, and assessing the mechanisms of changes. 16 eligible women who enrolled in the study were randomly assigned to ET or CBT groups. They were requested to fill out the marital satisfaction questionnaire (MSQ) at three stages: pre-treatment, post-treatment and after 2-month follow-up. Repeated measures ANOVA was conducted to analyze the data. The results show that there are statistically significant differences between the pre- and post-treatment and pre-treatment and follow-up in both interventions (p  <  0.05), while the comparative investigation of the post treatment and follow-up results in both groups reveals no significant difference (p >  0.05). Finally, although both treatment groups do exert a significant improvement on marital satisfaction (F = 89.423, p <  0.05), but the mechanisms of the changes in subscales, including “Attraction”, “Rapport”, “Attitude” and “Investment”, are different. The follow-up results show that CBT and ET have stable influences on marital ...
Source: Journal of Contemporary Psychotherapy - Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Source Type: research