On what do therapists agree? Assessing therapist evaluations of emotion regulation strategy effectiveness.
Matthew W SouthwardAnne C WilsonJennifer S CheavensPublished in: Psychology and psychotherapy (2020)
There is general consensus among practising therapists that problem-solving is the most effective emotion regulation strategy and expressive suppression is the least effective. However, CBT-oriented therapists rated acceptance and distraction as more effective than non-CBT-oriented therapists. Non-CBT-oriented therapists rated emotional expression and gathering information as more effective than CBT-oriented therapists. Years of experience were unrelated to ratings of emotion regulation strategy effectiveness.