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The effects of cognitive-behavioral group therapy and peer suppor | 46762
Journal of Depression and Anxiety

Journal of Depression and Anxiety
Open Access

ISSN: 2167-1044

+44 1223 790975

The effects of cognitive-behavioral group therapy and peer support/counseling in decreasing psychologic distress and improving quality of life


World Depression Congress

March 18-19, 2019 Dubai, UAE

Nora Alarifi Pharaon

Pharaon Consulting Group, USA

Keynote: J Depress Anxiety

Abstract :

Clinical depression has surged to epidemic proportions in recent decades. In 2012, WHO the World Health Organization was called upon to take action. Depression ranges from little-mentioned misery at the margins of society to a phenomenon that is rarely far from the news. It is widespread in classrooms and boardrooms, refugee camps and inner cities, farms and suburbs. Depression has become a significant contributor to the global burden of disease and affects approximately 350 million people in all communities across the world. Here, we will focus on depressive disorders as pertaining to women, more specifically, women in the MENA region. We will discuss reasons for higher depression rates in women as opposed to men including psychological, social, financial, and hormonal. We will present cognitive behavioral group therapy and peer support/ counseling as a best practice to provide help and support to MENA women where therapeutic alliances are formed, group cohesion is developed, self esteem is restored with greater cognitive improvements, and homework compliance is emphasized. We will end this presentation with recommendations for launching cognitive behavioral group interventions to help reduce prevalence of depression among women in the MENA region.

Biography :

Nora is a counseling psychologist licensed in New York and New Jersey and a Certified Group Psychotherapist. She has been practicing in the mental health field for close to 30 years providing individual, couple, and group psychotherapy as well as performing psychological evaluations for adults, youth and children. She is presently a consulting psychologist at Pharaon Consulting Group, Inc. where she focuses on populations of Arab American descent and/or Muslim faith. She is the executive director of Gain Contact Group, LLC a learning and training company, and a board member/Practice-at-Large of AMENA Psychological Association. Nora has earned her doctorate and master’s degree in psychology at Columbia University in the US and also holds a bachelor’s in business administration and a master’s degree in Education from the American University of Beirut.

E-mail: pharaon3@aol.com

 

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