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Cognitive Behavioral Therapy of Patients with Somatic Symptoms-Diagnostic and Therapeutic Difficulties

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLINICAL MEDICINE
Volume 10, Issue 14, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/jcm10143159

Keywords

psychosomatic; somatoform disorders; functional disorders; somatization; somatic diseases; depression; anxiety disorders; cognitive behavioral therapy

Funding

  1. Medical University of Lodz, Poland [503/5-062-02/503-51-001-19-00]

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This article explores the relationship between physical and mental health, highlighting the complexities and challenges faced by patients in modern healthcare. It emphasizes the role of cognitive behavioral therapy in addressing multifaceted somatic disorders.
In every somatic disease we can find a psychological element, just as it is not uncommon for numerous physical symptoms to occur in a mental disease. Nowadays, the patient is no longer just the owner of the sick organ but is considered and treated as a whole. The interpenetration of somatic manifestations with mental health problems forces patients who experience subjective suffering, including mental suffering, from current symptoms to visit specialists from different fields of medicine, and their treatment does not bring about any improvement. Cognitive behavioral psychotherapy (CBT) is one form of therapy that attempts to respond to the needs of an increasing-in recent years-number of patients who demonstrate somatic disorders of a multifaceted nature. The co-occurrence of physical and mental disorders repeatedly makes it impossible to determine which symptoms were the cause and which were the effect; hence, it is difficult to establish clear boundaries between the categories of these disorders and diseases. The therapist, to whom the patient with somatic diseases is eventually referred, may be faced with a diagnostic dilemma, the solution of which will give direction to further psychotherapeutic work. The common feature of this group of patients is a strong focus on physical ailments, while omitting or almost completely ignoring the psychological factors involved. The purpose of this paper is to present the causally diverse circumstances in which a patient with physical symptoms needs diagnosis and therapeutic support from the perspective of a cognitive behavioral approach.

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