Harvard Health Home
 
   
 
 
PRESS RELEASES HealthBeat Newsletter
 
 
Home > Press Releases > Couples Therapy  
 
 

Couples Therapy

March 1, 2007

Couples therapy, from the Harvard Mental Health Letter

BOSTON — Marriage and family difficulties account for about half of all visits to psychotherapists, and most therapists who specialize in family therapy work chiefly with couples. The therapist helps the couple work on eliminating mutual misunderstandings, unreasonable expectations, and unstated assumptions that perpetuate conflict, explains the March 2007 issue of the Harvard Mental Health Letter.

Couples Therapists

Couples therapists make little use of psychiatric diagnosis, but they do use many of the same methods employed by therapists who work with individuals: interpreting emotional conflicts and the influence of the past; assigning exercises for behavior change; challenging beliefs; offering advice and support; and teaching social skills and problem solving.

The couples therapist assumes that the unhappiness of a couple amounts to more than the sum of their individual problems and symptoms, and helps them examine their lives together and decide what changes are needed. Therapists do, however, try to help each partner understand his or her contributions to the couple's problems. The individuals are also encouraged to weigh the benefits and costs of being in the relationship.

Relationship Therapy

Most studies find that couples therapy can be helpful. However, it's unclear whether it can transform unhappy relationships into satisfactory ones, and whether the effects last. Improvement is usually maintained for six months, but often there is a relapse after a year or two. Therapists may try different treatment approaches, or they may emphasize features that all approaches have in common.

"Emotional problems arise between people as well as within them. Couples therapy addresses this fact, and therefore can help some relationships," says Dr. Michael Miller, editor in chief of the Harvard Mental Health Letter.

Also in this issue:

  • Folate for depression
  • Costs and benefits of antipsychotic drugs
  • The biology of romantic love
  • Money's subliminal effects
  • A doctor discusses: The value of transference interpretation
Related Information
The Harvard Mental Health Letter is your monthly guide to mental health
Click to enlarge
 

Harvard Mental Health Letter

The Harvard Mental Health Letter is a unique resource that covers a wide range of mental health issues and concerns. It presents the latest thinking, treatment options, therapies and debate of interest to both mental health care professionals and the concerned public. Read more

SUBSCRIBE NOW 12 monthly issues (Print+Electronic) $59.00
SUBSCRIBE NOW 12 monthly issues (Electronic Only) $55.00

RSS | XML FEED

The Harvard Mental Health Letter is available from Harvard Health Publications, the publishing division of the Harvard Medical School. You can subscribe to The Harvard Mental Health Letter for $59 per year at www.health.harvard.edu or by calling 1-877-649-9457 toll-free.

About Harvard Health Publications
Harvard Health Publications publishes five monthly newsletters—Harvard Health Letter, Harvard Women's Health Watch, Harvard Men's Health Watch, Harvard Mental Health Letter, and Harvard Heart Letter—as well as more than 50 special health reports and books drawing on the expertise of the 8,000 faculty physicians at Harvard Medical School and its world-famous affiliated hospitals. For more information about Harvard Medical School publications, please visit our Web site, www.health.harvard.edu.

Source: Harvard Health Publications
Contact: hhpmedia@hms.harvard.edu
Web site: http://www.health.harvard.edu

 

Bookstore
Newsletters
Harvard Health Letter
Harvard Women’s Health Watch
Harvard Men’s Health Watch
Harvard Heart Letter
Harvard Mental Health Letter
Perspectives on Prostate Disease
Premium Access
Special Reports
Exercise
Vitamins
Skin Care
Stress Management
Foot Care
See All Titles
Books
Your Developing Baby
The Fertility Diet
Eat, Drink, and Be Healthy
Beating Diabetes
The Harvard Medical School Family Health Guide
See All Titles
Browse
Common Medical Conditions
Wellness & Prevention
Emotional Well Being & Mental Health
Women’s Health
Men’s Health
Heart & Circulatory Health
Tools
Guide to Diagnostic Tests