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Ch. 9 Integrative Approaches to Psychotherapy PSYC E-2488 12/10/07 Exercise (15 minutes) Divide into groups of 3-4 Pick one member to be the patient Pick out a ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Ch. 9


1
Ch. 9 Integrative Approaches to Psychotherapy
  • PSYC E-2488
  • 12/10/07

2
Exercise (15 minutes)
  • Divide into groups of 3-4
  • Pick one member to be the patient
  • Pick out a presenting problem
  • Take an integrative model, e.g., theoretical
    assimilative or common factors/technical
    eclecticism
  • Present the patient and approach

3
Historical Background
  • 1. An Introduction to Integrative Approaches to
    Psychotherapy
  • - A product of integrating constructs and
    interventions from 2 traditional therapies
  • - Hope is an increase in efficacy
  • 2. Integrative Psychotherapy and Psychotherapy
    Integration A Distinction
  • - A clinical, conceptual, and philosophical
    openness to guide integration rather than another
    sectarian school of therapy
  • 3. Historical Antecedents to Contemporary
    Psychotherapy Integration
  • - French (1933) Psychoanalysis should integrate
    Pavlovs work
  • - Rosenzweig (1936) Many schools have common
    factors
  • - Dollard and Miller (1950) integrated
    psychoanalytic ideas about UCS motivation and
    conflict, with learning theory work by Hull,
    Spence, Mowrer, Tolman
  • - Alexander and Frenchs (1946) concept of the
    correctional emotional experience
  • - 1960s integration of systems, primarily
    behavioral and psychoanalytic
  • - Beck et al.,(1979)
  • - Marmor (1971) and Feather Rhodes (1973)
    Eclectic approaches.
  • - Wachtel (1977) Psychoanalysis and
    Behavior Therapy Toward an Integration.
  • - SEPI founded in the 1980s and 1st Journal of
    Eclectic and Integrative Psychotherapy, replaced
    by Journal of Psychotherapy Integration in 1991
    and two handbooks by Norcross and Goldfried and
    Stricker and Gold.

4
Historical Background cond.
  • 3. The Modes of Psychotherapy Integration
  • - Technical Eclecticism Most clinical, least
    theoretical. Broad and comprehensive assessment
    followed by strategies and techniques from two
    or more therapies to describe and address the
    interconnections between cognitive, behavioral,
    emotional, and interpersonal aspects of patient.
    Lazarus Multi-Modal Therapy (BASIC ID) is best
    example.
  • - Common Factors Approach to Integration Began
    with Rosenzweig (1936) and Jerome Franks
    (1961). Messer Wampold (2002) studies and
    meta- analysis conclude common factors account
    for most of critical therapeutic effect. Goal of
    treatment is to maximize patients exposure to
    unique combination of factors (insight,
    exposure, and provision of new experience)
  • - Theoretical Integration Most complex,
    sophisticated and difficult. Integrates various
    personality theories, models of psychopathology,
    and various mechanisms of psychological change.
    Subtle interactions between levels of behavior,
    interpersonal motivational, cognitive,
    affective, internal states and
    processes. Wachtels cyclical psychoanalysis is
    first good example.

5
Historical Background cond.
  • Assimilative Integration Suggested by Messer
    (1992) and refers to the observation that actions
    are defined and contained by the interpersonal,
    historical, and physical context in which they
    occur.
  • - Therapeutic interventions are highly complex
    interpersonal actions that mean different things
    to different people, especially when one
    considers that techniques are being assimilated
    in the context of other models.

6
The Concept of Personality
  • 1. Attention to personality is omitted from most
    integrative models that are based on common
    factors integration or on technical eclecticism.
  • 2. Personality is a much more important concept
    in the integrative psychotherapies that are based
    on theoretical or assimilative integration.
  • 3. Integrative theories substitute circular
    conceptualizations of causation for the linear
    views of causation that are typical of
    traditional personality theories.
  • - They guide structures and other features that
    need to be influenced by psychotherapy
  • - They integrate facts and processes neglected
    by traditional theories.

7
Psychological Health and Psychopathology
  • Few integrative theories have specific
    comprehensive models of health, though many have
    spoken about the dis-ease model.
  • Generally psychological health is seen as
    adaptive freedom from constraints on choice and
    definition of goals successfully choosing and
    modifying goals based on individual and social
    adaptive benefit actively developing and seeking
    out goals learning from self-generated feedback
    without intrapersonal or interpersonal
    interference.
  • Focus of model is on development(al) and
    maintenance of psychological and environmental
    factors that inhibit responsiveness and foster
    redundancy in functioning.

8
Psychological Health and Pathology cond.
  • Childhood and adolescence lay down the
    foundations of perception, thinking and
    motivation that are at the heart of
    psychopathology.
  • Painful interactions are internalized and form
    the cognitive and emotional representational
    system.
  • These negative representational systems feedback
    loops form the basis for CS/UCS predictions of
    psychological danger and lead to defensive and
    self-defeating feedback loops.
  • Such linked sequences of motivation, conflict,
    emotion, cognition, conflict and interpersonal
    behavior maintain underlying meaning structures
    (schemata, object representations, narratives
    reflected in the theories)
  • Diagnostic systems vary See BASIC ID,
    Trans-Theoretical Model (Prochaska DiClemente,
    2002), DSMs

9
The Process of Clinical Assessment
  • Based on methods that make up the particular
    therapies.
  • Example Assimilative Psychodynamic Psychotherapy
    Focus on conflict, character, resistance,
    object representations, etc. Assessment is
    ongoing and involves all levels of processing.
    Parameters of assessment include the possibility
    that parameters of technique may be borrowed from
    other systems to augment the base system.
  • Unit of assessment is the individual. Forms of
    assessment extend beyond base therapy, include
    cultural and SES factors, and /-s.
  • Few such systems rely heavily on tests or formal
    diagnostic categories.

10
The Practice of Therapy
  • Basic Structure of Therapy
  • - Generally variable (as components in base are
    heterogeneous/variable)
  • - Psychodynamic tend to be longer and met 1/X
    per week but there are exceptions (see Malan and
    Basch) CBT and Humanistic-Experiential shorter
    and meet less frequently
  • - Sessions 45-60 minutes
  • - Trend in recent years has been toward
    shorter/time-limited models
  • Goal Settings
  • - Nota Bene Integrative models allow goals to
    be established at any level
  • - Quite variable with psychodynamic/humanisti
    c-experiential goals more broadly defined (e.g.,
    meaning, representational structures, character,
    open to new integration and symbolization of
    experience symptom/function focused models are
    focused on symptom reduction/control/elimination
  • - Goal setting is collaborative (based on core
    need for trust and respect for experience)
  • - Therapist-driven are most likely short-term
    and patient-driven more psychodynamic/H-E

11
The Practice of Therapy cond.
  • Process Aspects of Therapy
  • - Generally any accepted form of intervention is
    a potential tool in the integrative therapy
    armamentarium
  • - Theory/Needs is assimilative-theoretical
    model Clinical Assessment/Process Matching is
    technical eclectic and common factors approach
  • - Homework, cognitive re-structuring,
    interpretation exposure techniques empty-chair,
    etc., are all options for incorporation into
    treatment
  • - Critical question is when to use what and
    when/how to switch orientations from one model to
    another (use example of tween using PR and the
    chaotic emergence of dynamically colored
    hypno-gogic imagery and rural immigrant Hispanic
    patient seeing deceased relative) framing makes
    critical difference
  • - Such switches in theoretical-assimilative
    models usually guided by therapists here-and-now
    observation of the process often rationale is
    when one approach is judged not to be working
  • - Concrete, active, and solution driven
    approaches are often used when patient is fragile
    and less psychologically sophisticated (see old
    psychoanalytic idea of parameters of technique
    and supportive-re-educational-re-constructive
    categorizations of Wolberg)
  • - Resistance is understood differently by models
    (e.g., fear of internal state vs. contributions
    of each to dyad) how worked with is determined
    by how it is understood

12
Curative Factors or Mechanisms of Change
  • Integrative models incorporate as many change
    factors as are possible, broadening the
    likelihood that patient will be exposed to as
    much that is therapeutic as is possible
  • - Me how this is understood is complex and
    depends on understanding both levels and
    contexts
  • Emphasis is determined by the model
  • Many roads to Rome (see example of different
    schools of yoga and modes of meditative
    experience)
  • Client/patient factors important (JAVIS) and
    personality and therapeutic relationship emerge
    in common factors research
  • Little about approach is unique
  • Uniqueness rests in the breadth of the process,
    rather than any single aspect

13
Treatment Applicability and Ethical Considerations
  • Uniquely suited to a diverse group of patients
    and problems
  • Patients issues guides the therapy and
    emphasizes the uniqueness of the approach
  • See McCulloughs CBASP , Chambless et al., and
    Linehans DBT as examples of integrative
    approaches applied to frequent and refractory
    disorders/problems
  • The problem, integrative model, and patients
    goals determine the limits of the treatment
  • Example Iris Fodors integration of Feminist,
    CBT and Gestalt Therapies

14
Research Support
  • Models with support include Linehans DBT,
    Beutlers Prescriptive Therapy, Prochaska and
    DiClementes Trans-theoretical Therapy, Klermans
    Interpersonal Therapy for Depression, Greenbergs
    Process-experiential therapy, McCulloughs CBSP
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