Metacognitive Therapy (MCT)
A third-wave therapy targeting not thought content but metacognitive processes — the beliefs and mental strategies that maintain pathological rumination and worry.
Presentation
Metacognitive Therapy (MCT) is a third-wave psychotherapeutic approach developed by Adrian Wells, professor of clinical psychology at the University of Manchester. Formally published in 2009, it differs from classical CBT by focusing on 'thoughts about thoughts' rather than thought content itself.
The model posits that it is not the content of a negative thought that causes psychological disorder, but the style of mental response it triggers. Wells identified a Cognitive Attentional Syndrome (CAS) comprising rumination, prolonged worry and self-focused attention strategies that maintain the disorder. This syndrome is fueled by positive metacognitive beliefs ('Worrying helps me prepare') and negative ones ('I cannot control my thoughts, they will drive me crazy').
Founder: Adrian Wells (born 1962), professor of clinical psychology, University of Manchester
Core Principles
MCT distinguishes two types of problematic metacognitive beliefs:
Positive metacognitive beliefs: 'Worrying helps me anticipate problems', 'Ruminating helps me understand what happened'. These beliefs motivate engagement in rumination and worry.
Negative metacognitive beliefs: 'My thoughts are uncontrollable', 'Worrying will make me ill', 'I must constantly monitor my thoughts'. These beliefs generate meta-worry (worry about worry) that amplifies distress.
Treatment aims to modify these metacognitive beliefs and develop a detached mode of information processing (detached mindfulness) where intrusive thoughts are passively observed without engagement or suppression. Attention Training Technique (ATT) is a central tool developing flexible attentional control.
Main Indications
- Generalized anxiety disorder (primary indication)
- Major and recurrent depression
- Obsessive-compulsive disorder
- Post-traumatic stress disorder
- Social phobia
- Panic disorder
- Chronic depressive rumination
Session Overview
MCT is a brief treatment, typically 8 to 12 sessions of 45 to 60 minutes. After initial assessment and metacognitive case conceptualization, the therapist introduces the metacognitive model by clearly distinguishing Type 1 thoughts (ordinary automatic thoughts) from Type 2 thoughts (metacognitive beliefs and responses).
Subsequent sessions work to modify metacognitive beliefs through Socratic questioning and targeted behavioral experiments (e.g., testing whether postponing worry reduces anxiety). ATT is practiced in session and prescribed as daily exercise. The patient progressively learns 'detached mindfulness' — observing intrusive thoughts without engaging, letting them pass naturally without suppression or rumination.
Variations and Sub-techniques
- MCT for generalized anxiety disorder (most studied protocol)
- MCT for depression
- MCT for OCD
- MCT for PTSD
- Group MCT
- Attention Training Technique (ATT) as standalone intervention
Contraindications
- Acute psychotic episode
- Severe cognitive impairment preventing metacognitive model comprehension
- Acute intoxication or unstabilized withdrawal
- Imminent suicidal risk
- Severe antisocial personality disorder
Medical Disclaimer
The information presented in this article is provided for educational and informational purposes only. It does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment prescription. If in doubt, always consult your physician or a qualified healthcare professional. The techniques described do not replace conventional medical treatment.