Title: Module 24
1Module 24
2HISTORICAL BACKGROUND
- Definition of psychotherapy
- Three basic characteristics
- verbal interaction between therapist and client
- development of a supportive relationship in which
a client can bring up and discuss traumatic or
bothersome experiences that may have led to
current problems - analysis of the clients experiences and/or
suggested ways for the client to deal with or
overcome his or her problems
3HISTORICAL BACKGROUND (CONTD)
- Early treatments
- 1400 to 1700, people who today would be diagnosed
as schizophrenics were considered insane and
called lunatics - Late 1800s, Dr. Benjamin Rush (considered the
father of American psychiatry), developed the
tranquilizing chair - Believed that mental disorders were caused by too
much blood to the brain
4HISTORICAL BACKGROUND (CONTD)
5HISTORICAL BACKGROUND (CONTD)
- Reform movement
- Moral therapy, popular in the early 1800s
- patients could be helped to function better by
providing humane treatment in a relaxed and
decent environment late 1800s, it was abandoned - 1930s, Sigmund Freud developed psychoanalysis
- early 1950s, wretched conditions and inhumane
treatment of patients persisted - mid 1950s, two dramatic changes happened
discovery of antipsychotic drugs and development
of community mental health centers
6HISTORICAL BACKGROUND (CONTD)
- Phenothiazines and deinstitutionalization
- Phenothiazines
- discovered in the early 1950s, block or reduce
the effects of the neurotransmitter dopamine and
reduce schizophrenic symptoms, such as delusions
and hallucinations - chlorpromazine (Thorazine)
- Deinstitutionalization
- refers to the release of mental patients from
mental hospitals and their return to the
community to develop more independent and
fulfilling lives
7HISTORICAL BACKGROUND (CONTD)
- Community mental health centers
- Offer low-cost or free mental health care to
members of the surrounding community, especially
the underprivileged - Provide briefer forms of therapy that are needed
in emergencies and focus on the early detection
and prevention of psychological problems
8QUESTIONS ABOUT PSYCHOTHERAPY
- Are there different kinds of therapists?
- Psychiatrists
- go to medical school, receive M.D. degree, and
then take a psychiatric residency additional
training in pharmacology, neurology,
psychopathology, and psychotherapeutic techniques - Clinical psychologists
- go to graduate school in clinical psychology and
earn a doctorate degree (Ph.D., Psy.D., or Ed.D.) - Counseling psychologists
- go to graduate school in psychology or education
and earn a doctorate degree (Ph.D., Psy.D., or
Ed.D)
9QUESTIONS ABOUT PSYCHOTHERAPY (CONTD)
- Are there different approaches?
- Insight therapy
- therapist and client talk about the clients
symptoms and problems with the goal of reaching
or identifying the cause of the problem - Cognitive-behavior therapy
- involves the application of principles of
learning - therapist focuses on the clients problem,
identifies specific thoughts and behaviors that
need to be changed, and provides techniques based
on learning principles to make desired changes
10QUESTIONS ABOUT PSYCHOTHERAPY (CONTD)
- Are there different approaches?
- Eclectic approach
- involves combining and using techniques and ideas
from many different therapeutic approaches - Medical therapy
- involves the use of various psychoactive drugs to
treat mental disorders by changing biological
factors, such as the levels of neurotransmitters
11INSIGHT THERAPIES
- Psychoanalysis
- Focuses on the idea that each of us has an
unconscious part that contains ideas, memories,
desires, or thoughts that have been hidden or
repressed because theyre psychologically
dangerous or threatening to our self-concept - Unconscious conflicts
- Chief reason for the development of psychological
problems (paranoia) and physical symptoms (loss
of feeling in a hand)
12INSIGHT THERAPIES (CONTD)
- Psychoanalysis
- Three techniques
- free association, dream interpretation, and
analysis of slips of the tongue - Transfer
- patient reacts to the therapist as a substitute
parent, lover, sibling, or friend and projects
strong emotions onto the therapist
13INSIGHT THERAPIES (CONTD)
14INSIGHT THERAPIES (CONTD)
- Techniques to reveal the unconscious
- Neuroses
- maladaptive thoughts and actions that arise from
some unconscious thought or conflict and indicate
feelings of anxiety - Free association
- technique that encourages clients to talk about
any thoughts or images that enter their heads - assumption is that this kind of free-flowing,
uncensored talking will provide clues to
unconscious material
15INSIGHT THERAPIES (CONTD)
- Techniques to reveal the unconscious
- Dream interpretation
- psychoanalytic technique based on the assumption
that dreams contain underlying, hidden meanings
and symbols that provide clues to unconscious
thoughts and desires
16INSIGHT THERAPIES (CONTD)
- Problems during therapy
- Transference
- client expresses strong emotions toward the
therapist as a substitute for someone important
in the clients life, such as mother or father - Resistance
- client reluctant to work through or deal with
feelings or to recognize unconscious conflicts
and repressed thoughts - Short-term dynamic psychotherapy
- emphasizes a limited time for treatment (20-30
sessions) and focuses on limited goals
17INSIGHT THERAPIES (CONTD)
- Problems during therapy
- Short-term dynamic psychotherapy
- therapists take more active and directive role
- identify and discuss clients problems
- resolve issues of transference
- interpret clients behaviors
- offer opportunity for the client to foster
changes in behavior and thinking - results in more active coping and important image
of oneself
18INSIGHT THERAPIES (CONTD)
- Client-centered therapy
- Also called person-centered therapy assumes that
each person has an actualizing tendency to
develop ones full potential - Therapists traits
- Empathy
- ability to understand what the client says, feels
- Positive regard
- ability to communicate caring, respect, and
regard - Genuineness
- ability to be real and nondefensive in
interactions
19INSIGHT THERAPIES (CONTD)
20INSIGHT THERAPIES (CONTD)
- Cognitive therapy
- Developed by Aaron Beck
- Assumes that we have automatic negative thoughts
that we typically say to ourselves without much
notice - Repeating these automatic negative thoughts
causes distortion in how we perceive and
interpret our world and influences how we behave
and feel
21BEHAVIOR THERAPY
- Definition
- Also called behavior modification
- uses the principles of classical and operant
conditioning to change disruptive behaviors and
improve human functioning - focuses on changing particular behaviors rather
than the underlying mental events or possible
unconscious factors - Systematic desensitization
- technique of behavior therapy in which the client
is gradually exposed to the feared object while
simultaneously practicing relaxation
22BEHAVIOR THERAPY (CONTD)
- Cognitive-behavior therapy
- Combines the cognitive therapy technique of
changing negative, unhealthy, or distorted
thought patterns with behavior therapy - Technique of changing maladaptive or disruptive
behaviors by learning and practicing new skills
to improve functioning