When dealing with couples there are multiple ways to approach issues. Two of them are the conjoint and the concurrent therapies. Each of these can be applied in a sex therapy situation, and each offers its own unique approach. Though the outcomes tend to be the same, getting there will depend on the needs of the clients. This paper will compare, contrast, and describe these therapeutic approaches and the theories upon which they are founded, and provide a situation in which they would each most be appropriate.
Conjoint therapy is commonly used in family therapy. The concept underlying this approach is that it joins the two partners (the husband and wife in most instances) under a single therapeutic plan. Essentially, conjoint therapy can be used for a range of issues that impact partners in a relationship. For instance, Zitzman and Butler (2005) show that it can be used to marital therapy to address sex addiction where the husband is addicted to Internet pornography: together, the husband and wife receive the therapy and counseling needed to ensure that the partnership is able to overcome this issue and deal with it effectively and positively.
Concurrent therapy is where two or more individuals are being treated for the same issue that is affecting them but they are seen individually instead of at the same time (Nichols, 2010). This therapeutic approach is helpful in isolating the individual issues of the individual family members or relationship partners and addressing them one-on-one instead of all together in unison with the other family members or partner. It offers a more personalize approach to therapy whereas conjoint therapy offers a more communal approach.
Thus, the main difference between conjoint therapy and concurrent therapy is that in the former the two clients share the same session and receive the therapeutic intervention together at the same time. In the latter, the two are seen separately and receive the therapeutic...
References
Hawton, K. (1995). Treatment of sexual dysfunctions by sex therapy and other approaches. The British Journal of Psychiatry, 167(3), 307-314.
Hefner, C. W., & Prochaska, J. O. (1984). Concurrent vs. conjoint marital therapy. Social Work, 29(3), 287-291.
Nichols, M. (2010). Family therapy concept and methods. NY: Pearson.
Titelman, P. (2008). Triangles: Bowen family systems theory perspectives. NY: Hawthorne Press.
Zitzman, S. T., & Butler, M. H. (2005). Attachment, addiction, and recovery: Conjoint marital therapy for recovery from a sexual addiction. Sexual Addiction & Compulsivity, 12(4), 311-337.
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