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| Published: December 31, 2022
Perceptions of Practitioners on Methods, Current Practice, and Barriers: A Descriptive Analysis of Cultural Adaptation of CBT in India
M.Phil & Ph.D / Professor, Clinical Psychology, Dept. of Psychiatry, AIIMS, Ansari Nagar, New Delhi, India. Google Scholar More about the auther
BPsych(Hnrs)/Research Intern in Psychology, AIIMS, New Delhi, India Google Scholar More about the auther
MA & PhD/CBT Therapist & President, Indian Association of Cognitive Behaviour Therapy, New Delhi, India Google Scholar More about the auther
M.Phil & Ph.D/ Professor in Clinical Psychology, Dept. of Clinical Psychology, NIMHANS, Hosur Road, Bangaluru,India Google Scholar More about the auther
M.Phil & Ph.D/Professor in Clinical Psychology, Dept. of Clinical Psychology, NIMHANS, Hosur Road, Bangaluru, India Google Scholar More about the auther
M.Phil & Ph.D/Associate Professor, Clinical Psychology, St.Xaviar College, Kolkotta, India Google Scholar More about the auther
DIP: 18.01.145.20221004
DOI: 10.25215/1004.145
ABSTRACT
Background: Cognitive-behavior therapy (CBT) is noted as the gold standard first-line treatment for various psychopathologies. Nevertheless, the application and practice of CBT widely varies across countries and practitioners. There is little evidence surrounding scientific methods of culturally adapting CBT. This likely results in an overinclusive use of the term CBT and threatens ethical practice. Aim: To examine perspectives of Indian practitioners on CBT practices, beliefs, and attitudes towards cultural/language adaptation of CBT in India. Methods: Adopting an observational design, 83 (response rate of 46%) Indian CBT practitioners participated in an online survey. Information was collected across five-sections: current CBT practice, assessment, barriers, cultural adaption vs culture-focused, method of cultural/language adaptation. Results: 93% of all CBT sessions were for adults (aged 19-59 years). 90% of practitioners adopted eclectic approaches, out of which 94% mixed techniques most regularly from other therapies. 71% made structural changes to their practice of CBT and 70% reported conducting CBT alongside family therapy. Majority did not use any standardized tools for session progress/therapy-outcome. More than 90% considered cultural adaptation over culture-focused CBT. 69% preferred integrating top-down and bottom-up approaches to cultural/language adaptation with field testing in each state and 93.6% viewed collaboration among Indian CBT practitioners as the method of validation. More than 70% highlighted the lack of CBT research in India. Conclusion: The findings highlighted the need for practice/ethical guidelines for CBT in India, a standardised Indian CBT with rigorous field testing (using robust cultural and language adaptation methods) and due emphasis on CBT supervised practice during education and training.
Keywords
This is an Open Access Research distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (www.creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any Medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
© 2022, Satapathy, S., Sanjivini, H., Kumar, N., Manjula, M., Paulomi, S. & Haldar, S.
Received: July 04, 2022; Revision Received: December 25, 2022; Accepted: December 31, 2022
Article Overview
ISSN 2348-5396
ISSN 2349-3429
18.01.145.20221004
10.25215/1004.145
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Published in Volume 10, Issue 4, October-December, 2022