The interactional nature of depression : advances in interpersonal approaches

by Thomas E. Joiner

Other authorsJames C. Coyne
1999

Status

Available

Call number

RC 537 .I565 1999

Publication

Washington, DC : American Psychological Association, c1999.

Description

Even when theorists, researchers and therapists themselves forget, depressed people will say that their involvement in interpersonal relationships matter: relationships perceived as good buffer them from depression, and relationships perceived as bad contribute to and maintain their depression. Depressed individuals frequently know that they are in a Catch 22 dilemma of needing the very people whom their symptoms disaffect. Processes such as excessive reassurance seeking and negative feedback seeking may be involved in the cycle of depression. Depressed individuals may also realize that their therapy needs to focus on improving the nature of their relationships. The Interactional Nature of Depression brings together interpersonal, cognitive, stress and coping, developmental, and social psychology perspectives into a more complex and more comprehensive approach to depression theory and research.… (more)

Physical description

xiv, 423 p.; 27 cm
Page: 0.3341 seconds