What is Cognitive Behavioral Conjoint Therapy (CBCT)?

Category: Psychotherapy

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Cognitive Behavioral Conjoint Therapy for Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (CBCT for PTSD) is a type of psychotherapy focused on the healing power of relationships to manage symptoms of PTSD.

Reported purpose & perceived effectiveness
Purpose Patients Evaluations Perceived Effectiveness
Panic disorder 2 0
Complex post-traumatic stress disorder 1 1
Excessive anger 1 0
Hypervigilance 1 0
Irritability 1 0

Show all 8 reasons taken


  • Major
  • Moderate
  • Slight
  • None
  • Can't tell

Side effects

Side effects as an overall problem

Side effects as an overall problem
Severity Evaluations Percentage
Severe 1
Moderate 0
Mild 0
None 1

Commonly reported side effects and conditions associated with Cognitive Behavioral Conjoint Therapy (CBCT)

Side effect Patients Percentage
Aggressive behavior 1
Dissociation 1
Flashbacks 1
Hypervigilance 1
Jumpiness (startling easily) 1
Nightmares 1

Show all 11 reported side effects

Why patients stopped taking Cognitive Behavioral Conjoint Therapy (CBCT)

Multiple reasons could be selected

Reason Patients Percentage
Other 1
See 1 patient who's stopped going to Cognitive Behavioral Conjoint Therapy (CBCT)

Duration

Stopped going to Cognitive Behavioral Conjoint Therapy (CBCT)

Duration Patients Percentage
1 - 6 months 1
Adherence
Adherence Evaluations Percentage
Always 2
Usually 0
Sometimes 0
Never taken as prescribed 0
Burden
Burden Evaluations Percentage
Very hard to take 0
Somewhat hard to take 2
A little hard to take 0
Not at all hard to take 0
Cost per month
Cost per month Evaluations Percentage
$200+ 0
$100-199 0
$50-99 0
$25-49 0
< $25 1
Not specified 1
Last updated:
There are no evaluations for Cognitive Behavioral Conjoint Therapy (CBCT).