Scenario:
Jane, a 38-year-old woman, wants therapy, but is afraid to venture outside of her home. She explains that this began shortly after her husband was killed in a car accident, in which she was a passenger. Her family is no longer willing to cater to her incessant demands because they feel that she is using the accident as an excuse for attention. Jane tells the therapist that she feels she is no longer loved and just "might as well give up." She wants to know if the therapist does therapy on a 'home-visit' basis.
QUESTIONS:
1. Describe how Kelly's philosophical theory has clinical application to Jane's personality structure?
2. Using the concepts of causal attribution, self-schemata, self-guides and other related cognitive constructs, explain how has Jane possibly misinterpreted her situation?
3. Utilizing the work of Bandura and Mischel explain why Jane is having such difficulty coping with life? In addition, how would Ellis, Meichenbaum, and Beck intervene in Jane's lifestyle?
By addressing the questions, this solution analyzes the case of Jane on several dimensions (Jane's personality structure, how she misinterpreted the situation and lifestyle) applying various cognitive concepts and theories. Supplemented with two information theoretical articles.