Reenee Singh

The Intercultural Exeter Couples Model


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ignorant. At its worst, it's irresponsible. Hence the IEM, the evolution of the EM.

      There are two urgent, major, and progressive themes calling ever more loudly and persistently through current developments in therapy theory, practice, and training—particularly within work with families and couples. Firstly, there is the need to work sensitively, wisely, and constructively and be attentive to differences in cultures within relationships that present in the therapy room. Secondly, there is the need to become able to work within evidence‐based practices that can cut across different schools of psychotherapy. That is, to be aware, or part of, a “third wave” of psychotherapy practice that unites themes and practices across formerly divided trainings. A currently well‐equipped clinician should be able to employ and understand techniques and ideas from a range of therapies, using these in a way that is coherent with their basic therapeutic training and stance. A currently well‐equipped clinician should be able to understand and be alert to nuances of cultural differences that will necessarily be playing out within couples and families that present for therapy, or that an individual brings in their individual narrative as it may unfold within the therapy room for individual therapy. Yet there has been no single coherent model of therapy theory, training, and practice, until now, that unites these two major themes. There is still no training that can thus prepare a therapist to practice in this way.

      The original EM arose in response to the NICE recommendation in 2009 for using behavioral couple treatment for depression. We italicize “behavioral” as that points specifically to the contribution of behavioral methods to the recommendation, while the statement itself, implies the importance of a systemic approach:

      (National Institute of Clinical Excellence [NICE], 2009)

      This statement is a systemic one: it underscores that the couple dynamic is an important part of the change mechanism, in this case for depression. Other research has found this to be so for other conditions (cf. Baucom, Whisman, & Paprocki, 2012). This is thought to be due, in part, to the effects of continuous, daily reinforcement of habit change within the intimate, real life of an ongoing domestic relationship. The evidence being amassed by CBT researchers on couples work in depression specifically has put couples therapy on that treatment map (Snyder & Halford, 2012). But systemic workers and thinkers have useful ideas and techniques to offer.

      That this is so was pointed to in an early article by Hafner and his co‐authors that partners can aid therapy (Hafner, Badenoch, Fisher, & Swift, 1983) as well as in research discussed by Snyder and Halford (2012) who provide a comprehensive overview of research on the effectiveness of couples therapy not only for relationship distress, but also for a variety of individual physical and mental health problems. On the flip side, problems are also maintained through reinforcement of habits within couple and family relationships, and there is also established evidence that relationship distress is associated with the onset or maintenance, or both, of mental health problems (Parker, Johnson, & Ketring, 2012).

      The EM was developed in an attempt to make systemic work more empirically sound: it resonates with past work that has been empirically verified. That is, its interventions are all ones that have been either validated as “gold standard” ones from (behavioral therapy) randomly controlled research trials (RCTs) or from the validation by a group of experts in current couples therapy practice. Therefore, the non‐behavioral, empathy‐based interventions it uses are ones validated by a convened Expert Reference Group to establish best practice for NHS commissioned work and for externally validated training courses (Pilling, Roth, & Stratton, 2010; Stratton, Reibstein, Lask, Singh, & Asen, 2011). The EM became a systemic‐behavioral training and practice and was developed by Janet Reibstein and Hannah Sherbersky at the University of Exeter. It was created within the School of Psychology, Clinical Education Development And Research (CEDAR) programme and its Accessing Evidence‐Based Psychological Therapies (AccEPT) clinical training clinic. It was subsequently rolled out and has been in practice since 2010 in numerous settings, both within that university clinic, various NHS services across the UK, and within private practices.

      While these behavioral interventions demonstrated effectiveness, Integrative Behavioral Couples Therapy (Jacobson & Christenson, 1998) was developed to address the fact that effectiveness tended to fade after about a year. This newer model added in “Acceptance/Tolerance” work. Indeed, adding in interventions that increased “acceptance” and “tolerance” (i.e., gaining understanding, apprehending respective limitations) yielded longer lasting effects. Acceptance and tolerance work