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Title: Treatment of Mental Disorders


1
Treatment of Mental Disorders
  • By Mr. C

2
Key Questions for this Unit
  • Whats the difference between a Psychiatrist,
    Clinical Psychologist and a Counselor?
  • How do Psychoanalysts treat mental disorders?
  • How do Behaviorists treat? How do Humanists
    treat? What is Cognitive therapy?

3
What is a psychiatrist?
  • Psychiatrists are MDs (medical doctors) with a
    specialty in treating mental disorders, usually
    with a biomedical therapy (medicine) and some
    talk therapy.
  • You would see a shrink if you have
    schizophrenia, severe depression, suicidal
    thoughts, and other severe mental problems that
    need medication.

4
What is a clinical psychologist?
  • A clinical psychologist has a PhD in psychology
    (no medical school). They treat fairly serious
    mental illnesses with talk therapies.
  • They might treat personality disorders, anxiety
    disorders, addictions using insight or talk
    therapy.

5
What is a counselor?
  • A counselor uses talk therapy to treat
    non-mental disorders like improving communication
    between family members, grief counseling, marital
    counseling, life strategies.
  • Counselors have a Masters Degree with specialty
    training.

6
  • 2. In contrast to a clinical psychologist, a
    psychiatrist is more likely to
  • a) engage in an eclectic
  • b) use a biomedical/somatic treatment
  • c) recognize the importance of group therapy
    with patients having the same disorder
  • d) treat clients in community mental health
    centers exclusively

7
Perspectives on Treatment
  • Psychoanalytic
  • Behavioral
  • Humanistic
  • Cognitive
  • Biophysical

8
What are Psychoanalytic methods?
  • Dream Analysis Manifest content (actual
    content) AND Latent content (hidden)
  • Transference strong emotional
    outburst/connection with therapist
  • Hypnosis
  • Free association talk about whatever and Dr.
    analyzes it
  • All 5 rely on exposing unconscious thoughts and
    interpreting them.

9
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10
VII. Psychoanalysis (psychodynamic)
  • Unconscious thoughts emotions are brought into
    awareness to be dealt with.
  • Psychological problems the result of
    unconscious processes.
  • Bringing unpleasant unconscious thoughts into to
    consciousness, produces catharsis.

11
A. What are Psychoanalytic methods of therapy (4
of them on same card if possible)
  • 1. Free Association patient reports
    anything that comes to his/her mind.
  • The psychoanalyst takes whatever you say
  • and treats it like a window into your
    unconscious mind.

12
B. Dream analysis
  • Dreams have two types of content
  • Manifest content- actual events in dream.
  • Latent content hidden message in dream.
  • (latent hidden)
  • Freud thought that each dream represents a
  • form of wish fulfillment. The wish may be
  • disguised, but it is always there.

13
C. Transference
  • Feelings of love or other emotions (hatred)
  • are expressed toward the therapist.
  • These feelings are actually unconsciously felt
  • toward others the patient is projecting these
  • feelings onto the therapist.
  • This provides clues about the clients feelings
  • about these other people.

14
Hypnosis
  • Hypnosis is a psychoanalytic therapeutic
    technique.
  • Some people are more susceptible to hypnosis than
    others cant by hypnotized against your will.
  • Whatever you think, patients report benefits from
    hypnosis.
  • video

15
  • 5. The goal of psychoanalytical therapy is
  • a) to change maladaptive behavior to
    more socially acceptable behavior
  • b) to change negative thinking into more
    positive attributions
  • c) to attain self-actualization
  • d) to bring unconscious conflicts to
    conscious awareness and gain
  • insight

16
  • In psychoanalysis, an emotional attachment to the
    therapist that symbolically represents other
    important relationships is called
  • resistance.
  • transference.
  • c. identification.
  • d. empathy

17
  • A psychoanalyst who believes in the theories of
    Freud would see mental disorders as caused by
  • a. birth trauma.
  • b. repressed sexuality and aggression.
  • c. bizarre dreams.
  • d. immature personal relationships.

18
Psychoanalysis summary
  • What causes mental disorders? unconscious
    (whatever)
  • Treatment?
  • Probing the unconscious mind (psychoanalysis)

19
Behavioral Therapy
20
Behavioral causes of disorders?
  • Behaviorists believe that mental problems are
    caused by classical conditioning (for example,
    phobias), operant conditioning (addictions,
    depression), and observational learning (we watch
    our parents and friends suffer so we copy them).
  • Treatment they change maladaptive behavior.

21
What are classical conditioning techniques?
  • Systematic desensitization (gradual exposure) to
    your phobia or germs (for OCD and phobias)
  • Flooding overexposure to what bugs you
  • Aversive conditioning associate bad things with
    your maladaptive behavior (shock testicles) video

22
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23
Operant conditioning treatment
  • Token economy (operant conditioning) Therapists
    will reward desirable behaviors with a reward
    system. This is usually applied to groups like
    hospital mental wards or classrooms or
    workplaces.

24
  • Systematic desensitization is a technique based
    on
  • a) classical conditioning
  • b) instrumental conditioning
  • c) operant conditioning
  • d) aversive conditioning

25
  • The owner of a chicken ranch ends a pet dog's
    habit of stealing and eating eggs by allowing the
    dog to "find" and eat several eggs laced with
    Tabasco sauce. The ranch owner's approach is
    similar to
  • covert sensitization.
  • aversion therapy.
  • c. implosive therapy.
  • d. desensitization techniques.

26
Behaviorism summary
  • What causes mental disorders? - We are
    conditioned to be sick (classical, operant,
    observational learning)
  • Treatment? We change the behavior through
    conditioning.

27
Humanistic Perspective of Psychology
28
Humanism
  • What is the root word of Humanism?
  • After years of psychoanalysts saying we are a
    bunch of id-driven animals and years of
    behaviorists studying rats in a cage, the
    Humanists came along in the 60s.

29
What is Humanism?
  • Major perspective of psychology.
  • Focuses on maximizing human potential, free will.
  • Important people Carl Rogers, Abraham Maslow.

30
Humanistic therapy?
  • Who is Carl Rogers? Carl Rogers was the founder
    of person-centered therapy, reflective listening,
    unconditional positive regard, empathy.
  • The patient/client has all the answers and the
    means to treat themselves. In person-centered
    therapy, the therapist acts as a sounding board
    for the patient, sometimes rephrasing what the
    patient says (reflective listening). Empathy is
    important!

31
Reflective listening
  • Patient to Rogerian therapist Im really
    depressed.
  • Therapist I see. Yes. You are depressed.
  • Patient Nothing is going well.
  • Therapist Nothing well.
  • Patient I feel like killing myself.
  • T Youre thinking of killing yourself.
  • P Yes, Im going to do it NOW.
  • T You want to do it now.
  • P Jumps out window.
  • T Woosh. Splat

32
Person-Centered Therapy(Client-centered or
Rogerian)
  • Show the client unconditional positive regard
    accepting and valuing self (and people)
    regardless of their behavior
  • Allow the client to take responsibility for his
    life
  • Mirror the clients emotions and thoughts so that
    he/she can decide their path in life
  • Be congruent (honest, genuine, vulnerable)
  • Show empathy

33
Maslows hierarchy of needs
34
Maslows hierarchy of needs
  • People cannot maximize their potential unless
    their more basic needs are met.
  • If a familys home just got destroyed by a
    tornado, can they focus on their communication
    skills?
  • If you are hungry, can you worry about your self
    esteem?

35
Humanistic Therapy
  • Humanists are really touchy-feely, but without
    them we are just rats in a cage.
  • Rogers and Maslow put the human element back
    into psychology and therapy.
  • Their philosophy We are all humans striving to
    maximize our potential. A therapists job is to
    remove obstacles to self-actualization.

36
Humanism treatment summary
  • What causes mental disorders?
  • Barriers to self actualization.
  • How to treat mental disorders?
  • Person-centered therapy, reflective listening,
    unconditional positive regard.

37
  • Vic is encouraged to take charge of the therapy
    session and his therapist uses an active
    listening approach to mirror back the feelings he
    hears from him. Which therapy is most likely
    being described?
  • a) client-centered therapy
  • b) cognitive therapy
  • c) psychodynamic therapy
  • d) existential therapy

38
  • When a therapist attempts to see the world
    through the client's eyes and to feel some part
    of what he or she is feeling, the therapist is
    using
  • a. authenticity. b. empathy.
  • c. reflection. d. ego-centering.

39
  • A therapist that engages in reflective listening,
    non-directive therapy, and has unconditional
    positive regard for the client is probably
  • a. cognitive b. behavioral
  • c. humanistic. d. psychodynamic

40
What is cognitive therapy?
  • Cognitive therapy focuses on changing how the
    client/patient thinks.
  • The therapist focuses on changing/fixing the
    maladaptive thoughts of the patient
  • It can be confrontational
  • Cognitive therapy also educates the client,
    teaches him/her proper behaviors/thoughts

41
Cognitive perspective
  • We are depressed because we are irrational. Our
    expectations are too high and misplaced. We want
    everyone to love us and accept us. We want every
    thing to go our way. We stay angry about stuff
    that happened a looong time ago. WE MUST CHANGE
    THE WAY WE THINK TO BE HAPPY AND SUCCESSFUL.

42
Who are famous cognitive therapists?
  • Aaron Beck reality therapy
  • Albert Ellis rational emotive therapy

43
Aaron Beck? Cognitive therapy
  • Distorted thinking has a negative effect on our
    behavior no matter what type of disorder (Aaron
    Beck, 1997).

44
Albert Ellis Rational Emotive Behavioral Therapy
  • vigorously challenges peoples illogical,
    self-defeating attitudes and assumptions a
    confrontational therapy

45
Rational Emotive Therapy Ellis
  • A-B-C theory of dysfunctional behavior
  • A Activating event
  • B Belief
  • C emotional Consequence based on that belief.

46
Example of Rational Thinking
  • A fail a midterm examination
  • BIts unfortunate that I failed-I did not study
    hard enough and I must make sure that I study
    harder for the final
  • Cno consequences (no emotional disturbance)

47
Example Irrational Thinking leads to Emotional
Disturbance
  • A Fail exam
  • B Im stupid, Ill never be able to pass this
    course and I will fail this course
  • Cdepression

48
Rational Emotive Therapy
  • Identify patients irrational beliefs
  • Add D and E to A-B-C theory
  • Teach the patient to Dispute the beliefs and
    substitute logical and rational beliefs
  • Evaluate the effects of disputing their
    irrational beliefs

49
CBT Effective for Which Disorders?
  • Empirically supported treatment for
  • Depression
  • Generalized anxiety disorder
  • Obsessive compulsive disorder
  • Panic disorder

50
Cognitive summary
  • What causes mental disorders?
  • Irrational thoughts and beliefs
  • How to treat disorders?
  • Change the thoughts and beliefs

51
  • In rational-emotive therapy,
  • a.clients are encouraged to take responsibility
    for their own choices.
  • b.clients learn to challenge irrational beliefs.
  • c.the therapist seeks to have the client discover
    rational insights on his or her own.
  • d.irrational elements of the unconscious are made
    to conform to reality.

52
  • One difference between psychoanalytic and
    cognitive models of treatment is that cognitive
    therapists
  • Say little during sessions
  • Emphasize the primacy of behavior
  • Focus on the present
  • View repressed thoughts about ones childhood as
    the root of most problems
  • Do not face their clients

53
  • Who would suggest that cognitive distortions or
    errors in logic that are blown out of proportion
    could lead to psychological disorders?
  • A. Sigmund Freud
  • B. Ivan Pavlov
  • C. Carl Rogers
  • D. Aaron Beck
  • E. Tommy Chong

54
Eclectic therapy? uses tools from cognitive,
behavioral and humanistic perspectives
55
Group Therapy
56
Benefits of Group Therapy?
  • Is cheap, effective. (only 1 professional is
    needed)
  • It allows people to gain insight into their own
    behaviors and thoughts
  • People dont feel like they are the only one with
    their problem they can witness the therapist
    treat others with similar problems.
  • You can cure yourself while curing others.

57
  • All of the following are potential benefits of
    group therapy EXCEPT
  • a) it is often more economical than 11
    treatment
  • b) it does not require the services of a mental
    health professional
  • c) clients with similar problems can provide
    helpful insight and feedback to peers
  • d) group members can see how their problems
    might impact others

58
What is the biomedical approach to
treatment?Drugs, surgery, ECT
59
Types of drugs?
Antipsychotics (schizophrenia) can lead to
tardive dyskinesia Antidepressants (Prozac,
Zoloft, Wellibutruin) Antianxiety can lead to
drowsiness (Xanax, Paxil)
60
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61
Somatic therapy (Drug Therapy)
  • Antipsychotic drugs
  • alleviate the symptoms of severe disorders such
    as schizophrenia ExamplesThorazine,
  • many work by blocking dopamine receptor sites
  • Can lead to tardive dyskinesia, (tremors)

62
Drug Therapy
  • Psychopharmacology The prescribed use of drugs
    to help treat symptoms of mental illness
    ostensibly to ensure that individuals are more
    receptive to talk therapies

63
Drug Therapy
  • Antidepressants and mood stabilizers
  • Include Prozac, monoamine oxidase (MOA)
    inhibitors,
  • lithium carbonate is a mood stabilizer (effective
    against bipolar disorder)
  • Treat depression and bipolar disorder
  • Usually affect serotonin and/or norepinephrine

64
SSRIs block the reuptake of serotonin between 2
neurons
65
Drug Therapy
  • Antianxiety drugs
  • work by depressing central nervous system
    activity
  • Most common side effect - drowsiness
  • highly addictive, can be fatal when mixed with
    alcohol
  • sudden cessation after long-term use can result
    in severe withdrawal symptoms, including
    seizures, increased anxiety,
  • and in rare cases, death
  • Xanax, Paxil

66
Drug Therapy in ADHD
  • Stimulants suppress activity level in persons
    with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder
    (ADHD)
  • There is controversy from concern that the causes
    and boundaries of ADHD are vague and the
    potential exists for overdiagnosis

67
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68
  • _______ is any technique involving surgical
    alteration of the brain.
  • Ablation lesioning
  • Psychosurgery
  • c. Deep ECT
  • d. Psychic surgery

69
  • 4. The MOST commonly cited side effect
    associated with anti-anxiety drugs is
  • a) insomnia
  • b) blurred vision
  • c) drowsiness
  • d) tachycardia

70
  • 9. Prozac and other modern antidepressant
    medications work to
  • a) block dopamine receptors
  • b) decrease the level of acetylcholine
  • c) break down the MAO enzymes
  • d) block the reuptake of seratonin

71
  • 11. Valium is
  • a) an antidepressant drug
  • b) an MAO inhibitor
  • c) an antipsychotic drug
  • d) an antianxiety drug

72
Psychosurgery
  • Psychosurgery The general term for surgical
    intervention in the brain to treat psychological
    disorders
  • The infamous prefrontal lobotomy is no longer
    performed
  • Severing the corpus callosum, however, can reduce
    life-threatening seizures

73
Brain-Stimulation Therapies
  • Electroconvulsive therapy ECT is used for the
    treatment of severe depression
  • Transcranial magnetic stimulation, a possible
    alternative to ECT, can also be used for the
    treatment of depression, schizophrenia, and
    bipolar disorder

74
Transcranial magnetic stimulation
  • Video

75
  • 1930s-1950s
  • Frontal lobotomy
  • Became Prefrontal lobotomy
  • Muniz won Nobel prize for procedure
  • Procedure eventually banned
  • Destruction of personality
  • Replaced in 1954 by first anti-psychotic
    Thorazine

76
  • Treating disorders with drugs or surgery is known
    as
  • cognitive therapy
  • humanistic therapy
  • c. biomedical therapy
  • d. psychoanalysis

77
  • Carl Rogers is responsible for
  • client-centered therapy.
  • psychoanalysis.
  • c. directive therapy.
  • d. existential therapy.

78
  • The aim of cognitive-behavioral therapy is to
    _____
  • Discover unconscious motives for behavior
  • Change the way people behave
  • Change the way people think and behave
  • Change peoples negative thinking patterns

79
  • Ann is suffering from depression and no
    psychological or drug therapies are working to
    alleviate her symptoms. The biomedical technique
    of ____ may be used as a last resort.
  • Flooding
  • Systematic desensitization
  • Electroconvulsive therapy
  • psychosurgery

80
  • Modern antidepressants, such as Prozac, work to
    block the reuptake of which neurotransmitter?
  • Dopamine
  • Serotonin
  • Acetylcholine
  • GABA

81
  • John is a 12-year-old who is having trouble
    dealing with his familys relocation to a new
    city. He most likely first sees a ______
  • Psychiatrist
  • Counselor
  • Clinical psychologist
  • Registered nurse
  • Psychoanalyst

82
  • In aversion therapy a person __________ to
    associate a strong aversion with an undesirable
    habit.
  • knows
  • learns
  • wants
  • hopes
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