Designed for brief therapy, this book suggests a maximum of 24 sessions. With patients who have deep-seated shame and punishing guilt, you aren't going to see much movement in 24 sessions. One patient of mine, after over a year, is still withholding deeply shameful things because the pain is too great to expose. He also has a deep sense of shame around failing. If I took an approach to therapy that required setting tasks each week, he would have been so overwhelmed with anxiety around failing, that he would have dropped out long ago.
There are some useful ideas in here, but to use this as a general approach for depression is risky. The BA coaching approach can be useful for weaving into some treatments, but should still be considered complimentary to more robust case conceptualization. I wouldn't recommend following an approach of diagnosing depression and then jumping into BA. Take some time to understand the deeper history of the client and figure out what they need. If it's BA coaching, by all means, follow the method in this guide.
A thorough and easy to read, if perhaps sometimes a bit dull, summary of behavioral activation which seemlessly incorporates themes from other behavioralist modalities such as ACT and DBT.
This is a great and practical guide to including behavioral activation in the treatment of depression. The idea is to get the client moving. These interventions can be included in psychotherapy, no matter what the clinician's orientation might be.
Very clean system, easily integratale with other interventions, possibly cognitive in nature. I would have preferred an operational key concepts summary of Behavioural Analysis.
Great text to learn about Behavioral Activation - an evidence-based therapy for clients - an easy read - organized well - offers examples - provides a sound foundation for applying it with your patients