Fibromyalgia - Behavioral Therapy

(Page 2)




A typical cognitive therapy program may involve the following measures:

  • Keep a Diary. Patients are usually asked to keep a diary, and it is usually a key part of cognitive therapy. The diary serves as a general guide for setting limits and planning activities. Patients use the diary to track any stress factors, such as a job or a relationship that may be making the pain worse or better.
  • Confront Negative or Discouraging Thoughts. Patients are taught to challenge and reverse negative beliefs. For example, "I'm not good enough to control this disease, so I'm a total failure" becomes the coping statement "Where is the evidence that I can control this disease?"
  • Set Limits. Limits are designed to keep both mental and physical stress within manageable levels, so that patients do not become discouraged by getting "in over their heads." For example, tasks are broken down into incremental steps, and patients focus on one at a time.
  • Seek out Pleasurable Activities. Patients list a number of enjoyable low-energy activities that they can conveniently schedule.
  • Prioritize. Patients learn to drop some of the less critical tasks or delegate them to others.
  • Accept Relapses. Over-coping and accomplishing too much too soon can often cause a relapse of symptoms. Patients should respect these relapses and back off. They should not consider them a sign of failure.


Support Organizations and Group Therapy

Cognitive therapy may be expensive and not covered by insurance. Alternative and effective approaches that are free or less costly include strong, intelligently managed support groups or group psychotherapy. In one center, educational discussion groups were as effective, or even more so, than a cognitive therapy program. Such results are not typical in all centers, of course. Therapeutic success varies widely depending on the skill of the therapist.



Review Date: 12/15/2006
Reviewed By: Harvey Simon, MD, Associate Professor of Medicine, Harvard Medical School; Physician, Massachusetts General Hospital

Find a Therapist

Powered by Psychology Today


PR Newswire