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The Psychotherapies

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Title: The Psychotherapies


1
The Psychotherapies
2
Colleges position
  • Mental health strategy justifies it
  • MHPs should learn about lived experience of
    consumers and carers
  • MHPs gain therapeutic leverage from their
    relationship with consumers and carers
  • Psychiatrists should be well versed in CBT
    psychodynamics incl. Long-term therapy
  • Psychiatrists are uniquely placed
  • Medical training complex, severe, co-morbid
    incl. Physical disorders
  • Concurrent pharmacological therapy
  • Involuntary treatment
  • Biopsychosocial perspective
  • Child adolescent training developmental
    perspective

3
Psychotherapy in emergencies!
  • The META Principles
  • Manage own feelings
  • Empathic can be the way MHA is invoked!
  • Take time true emergencies are rare
  • Ally with patient in dealing with 3rd parties
  • Suicidal
  • Understand accept pain --gt provide hope
  • Violent
  • Patients often fearful and --gt fear in others
  • Remind yourself theyre suffering and need help

4
Attachment theory
bond with other that you can contact under
stress Bowlby - evolutionary significance -
systems theory dynamics - elaboration of
increasing relationship with care giver in
development Secure / sense of oneself as
lovable and others as trustworthy Insecure / -ve
effect on ability to develop future
relationships Even insecure attachment figures
satisfy some attachment needs so DON'T TOTALLY
DEMONISE the inconsistent/poor caregiver
5
Attachment
  • 2. Preferential attachment for human-ness (eg
    faces and voices from 6 weeks)
  • 4. Indiscriminate attachment to humans until 7/8
    months
  • 1. If attachment insecure, there can be
    indiscriminate attachment and disinhibited
    behaviour

6
  • 3. Monkey experiments showed that if surrogate
    cloth mothers were rejecting, infant more
    clingy to them
  • Abused children can have strong attachment and
    loyalty
  • Anxiety can increase attachment, even towards the
    cause of the anxiety

7
Long-Term
  • 5. Early attachment associated with adult
    relationship styles
  • ?early inner working models of relationships act
    as prototypes for later relationships
  • 6. Neonatal separation may affect mums bonding,
    rather than childs attachment
  • This could affect later attachment
  • Cannot say it will cause emotional disorder in
    adulthood

8
The big 5 personality dimensions CANEO
9
Erikson
  • Epigenetic principle Developmental stages occur
    in sequential clearly defined stages that must be
    satisfactorily resolved for developments to
    proceed smoothly
  • Personality is developed as the person passes
    through developmental stages, and is continuously
    being modeled and thus is able to be changed.
  • Therapy involves past tensions and poor
    resolutions of crises being relived in the
    therapeutic relationship and learning new ways of
    dealing with issues
  • Teaching the observed to be self-observant

10
Erikson
11
Non-specific therapeutic factors
  • Good therapeutic relationship
  • Opportunity for catharsis and ventilation
  • Fostering of insight/learning new ways to cope
  • Placebo or hope factor (patients expectation
    that it will help)
  • Patients motivation
  • Therapists charisma and belief in the
    model/system they are using
  • Therapists sanctioned healer role
  • Therapists ability to empathise with and
    validate the patient
  • Explanatory model (provision of an explanation
    for problems)
  • Structure of therapy the ritual, regularity,
    frame or holding aspect of it

12
The psychotherapies
  • CBT

13
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14
Becks thinking errors
15
CBT the evidence
  • Better than generalist counselling
  • Panic disorder and GAD (CBT)
  • Phobic disorders (Exposure therapy systematic
    desensitisation)
  • OCD (Exposure and response prevention)
  • Huge evidence base also for MDD
  • But usually compared with antidepressants

16
The psychotherapies
  • IPT

17
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18
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19
IPT miscellany
  • Interpersonal inventory is made early
  • Who
  • How often in contact
  • Whats good bad about it
  • What does each party expect
  • How could it be made better
  • Interpersonal disputes are assessed as in
  • Renegotiation they are trying to fix it
  • Impasse the cold marriage
  • Dissolution irretrievably disrupted

20
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21
PSYCHODYNAMICS
22
Key Psychodynamic ConceptsUnfortunately,
Conscious Things Can Really Obscure Aetiologies
  • Unconscious is much of mental life
  • The Child is the father of the man
  • Transference to the therapist teaches much
  • Countertransference mirrors what the patient
    induces in others
  • Resistance to therapy is much of what therapy is
    about!
  • Overdeterminism of aetiologies and functions of
    symptoms
  • Authenticity and uniqueness are what we aim the
    patient to develop a sense of

23
Topographical Structural
  • Conscious
  • Preconscious
  • Unconscious
  • Primary process thinking
  • No place/person/time
  • Operates on images and symbols
  • Ego Cu
  • Id U
  • Superego cU
  • EgoC Executive
  • Ego u Defences
  • Id sex aggression
  • S.Egoego ideal
  • prescribes should
  • moral consciounce
  • proscribes shouldnt

24
Symptoms psychodynamic compromises
Ego ? Id has conflict ? Superego
Signal anxiety
Ego defends
A symptoms is formed as a compromise
Also gratifies Ids wish in a Distorted way
Curbs unbearable expression
25
Defences
26
Defences
27
Defences
28
Defences
  • Funtions
  • Protect against undesirable id wishes e.g. sexual
    or aggressvie
  • Self-esteem maintenance e.g. in narcissistic
    threat
  • Abandonment protecting against
  • External threat e.g. denying illness

29
Freuds development
30
Object-relations theory
  • Melanie Klein Representations of experiences
    with (associated affective states) people
    including the self to whom the infant relates are
    internalised (sometimes inaccurately) as psychic
    objects
  • British independent school Fairburn,
    WinnicotPrimary developmental motive is object
    seeking vs drive gratification (cf. Freud)

31
Self Psychology KohutDevelopmental perspective
Lack of developmentally appropriate empathy from
mum
Deficit sense that somethings
missing/selfobject functions are lacking
Looking for responses from others to make up for
lacking selfobject functions
32
Attachment theory Bowlby
Displaying behaviours to lure mum
Physical closeness to mum
Soothing psychological state
33
Dis-attachment
34
Dream terminology
35
Psychodynamic odds and sods
  • Autistic phase/normal autism (M. Mahler)
  • First few weeks of life where self/other boundary
    doesnt exist
  • Identification against mothers femaleness (N.
    Chodorow)
  • Leads to boys sexual identity development
  • Mirror transference (H. Kohut)
  • Therapist is experienced as being the same as
    patient
  • Therapists sole role is seen as being to praise
    or mirror the patient

36
Brief dynamic psychotherapy
? The task is to enable the patient to understand
and resolve his internal conflict and its
relationship to the other people in his life,
past and present. ? Malans (1979) 2
triangles -Triangle of conflict- hidden feeling
or impulse / anxiety / defence -Triangle of
person- past relationships, current or recent
relationships, transference relationships. ? Model
extended by Molnos (1984) combined the 2
triangles
37
Narrative therapy
38
Narrative therapy
39
Adherence therapy
Phases A1 Eliciting patients stance or
attitudes to treatment 1 A2 Exploring
ambivalence towards treatment 1 A3 Highlighting
need for maintenance treatment 1 B Key
principles of Adherence therapy B1 Non-blaming
atmosphere 1 B2 Focus on eliciting the
patients concerns 1 B3 Express empathy with
patient 1 B4 Support self-efficacy (knowledge
on which to base choices, autonomy, self-care
etc.) 1 C Key techniques of Adherence therapy
C1 Reflective listening 1 C2 Regular
summarizing 1 C3 Inductive questioning (using
specific examples to help patient grasp overall
principles) 1 C4 Explore ambivalence,
exploration of pros and cons of alternatives 1
C5 Discussion of the discrepancy between present
behaviour and broader goals 1 C6 Use of
normalizing rationales (e.g. Giving examples of
how unusual symptoms can be caused by various
things such as Sleep deprivation, Post-traumatic
stress disorder, Sensory deprivation, Hostage
situations, Sexual abuse, etc. - so as to help
the patient feel more ' normal' and less
alienated by the concept of "schizophrenia", and
to catastrophize less about the term is
combined with sensible, accurate psychoeducation
and explanations of symptoms.) 1 C7 Techniques
drawn from Cognitive Therapy 1 C8 Techniques
drawn from Motivational Interviewing 1 C9
Techniques drawn from Psychoeducation principles
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