Abstract
Women have long been the primary consumers of psychotherapeutic services, outnumbering males at a ratio of two to one (Chesler, 1972; Worrell, 1980). The changing nature of male and female roles in the past 15 years, along with the mental health community’s emerging awareness of the overrepresentation of women in certain emotional disorders, has pointed to a need for a therapy better geared to helping women with the practical and emotional problems they face as they attempt the exciting but difficult transition into more expanded roles. Rational-emotive therapy, combined with a critical examination of female sex-role socialization messages, a “primordial soup” in which irrational beliefs abound, is seen as a particularly effective approach for helping this therapy population.
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Wolfe, J.L. (1985). Women. In: Ellis, A., Bernard, M.E. (eds) Clinical Applications of Rational-Emotive Therapy. Springer, Boston, MA. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4613-2485-0_5
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