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Anthony Ryle

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Anthony Ryle (born 1927),[1] is an English medical doctor. He studied at Oxford and University College Hospital, qualified in medicine in 1949. He worked as a General Practitioner in North London, then directed the University of Sussex Health service, and later worked as a Consultant Psychotherapist in St. Thomas' Hospital, London, from 1983 to 1992. While in general practice he realised that a lot of his patients were presenting with psychological problems or distress, which he confirmed by epidemiological studies. He developed interest in psychotherapy and later developed a time limited therapy which can be offered in the National Health Service. This type of therapy is known as cognitive analytic therapy.[2] In the 1960s he moved to Kingston, on the outskirts of Lewes, East Sussex with his wife and four children.

Publications

Chapters

Critically engaging CBT: The view from CAT. Chapter 3 in Critically engaging CBT. Del Loewenthal and Richard House (eds.). McGraw-Hill: Open University Press (2010)

Books

  • Ryle, A. (1990) Cognitive Analytic Therapy: Active Participation in Change. Chichester: John Wiley & Sons.
  • (1995) Research relating to CAT. In Cognitive Analytic Therapy: Developments in Theory and Practice (ed. A. Ryle), pp. 174– 189. Chichester: John Wiley & Sons.
  • (1997) Cognitive Analytic Therapy for Borderline Personality Disorder: The Model and the Method. Chichester: John Wiley & Sons.

Articles

  • (1991) "Object relations theory and activity theory: a proposed link by way of the procedural sequence model". British Journal of Medical Psychology, 64, 307– 316.
  • (1992) "Critique of a Kleinian case presentation". British Journal of Medical Psychology, 65, 309 – 317.
  • (1993) "Addiction to the death instinct? A critical review of Joseph’ s paper 'Addiction to near death' ". British Journal of Psychotherapy, 10, 88 – 92.
  • (1994 a) "Projective identification: a particular form of reciprocal role procedure". British Journal of Medical Psychology, 67, 107 – 114.
  • (1994 b) "Persuasion or education: the role of reformulation in CAT". International Journal of Short Term Psychotherapy, 9, 111 – 118.
  • (1995) "Defensive organizations or collusive interpret-ations? A further critique of Kleinian theory and practice". British Journal of Psychotherapy, 12, 60 – 68.
  • (1996) "Ogden’s autistic-contiguous position and the role of interpretation in analytic theory building". British Journal of Medical Psychology, 69, 129– 138.
  • (1998) "Transferences and countertransferences: the cognitive analytic therapy perspective". British Journal of Psychotherapy, 14, 303 – 309.

References

  1. ^ Loewenthal, Del; House, Richard, eds. (2010). Critically engaging CBT (PDF). McGraw-Hill, Open University Press. p. x. Retrieved 25 February 2012.
  2. ^ Tallis, Frank (1998-07-01). Changing minds: the history of psychotherapy as an answer to human suffering. Cassell. p. 160. ISBN 978-0-304-70362-3. Retrieved 23 February 2012.

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