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Chapter 13 Overview

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Title: Chapter 13 Overview


1
Chapter 13 Overview
  • Insight therapies
  • Relationship therapies
  • Behavior therapies
  • Cognitive therapies
  • Biomedical therapies
  • Evaluating the therapies
  • The therapeutic relationship

2
Insight Therapies
  • Approaches to psychotherapy based on the notion
    that psychological well-being depends on
    self-understanding

3
What are the basic techniques of psychodynamic
therapies?
  • Psychotherapies that attempt to uncover repressed
    childhood experiences that are thought to cause
    the patients current problems
  • Psychoanalysis is a technique developed by Freud
  • Free association
  • Explores the unconscious by having patients
    reveal whatever thoughts, feelings, or images
    come to mind
  • Dream analysis
  • Areas of emotional concern repressed in waking
    life are sometimes expressed in symbolic form in
    dreams
  • Transference
  • Emotional reaction that occurs during
    psychoanalysis, in which the patient displays
    feelings and attitudes toward the analyst that
    were present in another significant relationship

4
What are the basic techniques of psychodynamic
therapies?
  • Object relations therapy
  • Based on idea that early relationships form
    blueprints for future relationships
  • Therapist helps clients restructure current
    relationships, changing maladaptive patterns
    formed in early relationships
  • Interpersonal therapy
  • Brief psychotherapy that helps clients understand
    and cope with four interpersonal problems
    associated with depression
  • Severe response to death of a loved one
  • Interpersonal role disputes
  • Difficulty adjusting to role transitions
  • Deficits in interpersonal skills

5
What is the goal of the therapist in
person-centered therapy?
  • Humanistic therapies assume that people have the
    ability and freedom to lead rational lives and
    make rational choices
  • Founded by Carl Rogers (1951)
  • Therapists show empathy and create a climate of
    unconditional positive regard
  • Goal is to allow the client to direct the therapy
    session and move toward self-actualization
  • The patients realization of his inner potential

6
What is the major emphasis of Gestalt therapy?
  • Helps clients fully experience their feelings,
    thoughts, and actions
  • Emphasizes clients taking responsibility for
    their behavior, instead of blaming society or
    parents
  • Goal is to help the client resolve past
    conflicts, achieve a more integrated self, and
    become more self-accepting
  • Gestalt therapy is directive
  • Therapist actively directs the therapy session
  • Provides answers and suggestions to the client

7
Relationship Therapies
  • Therapies that attempt to improve patients
    interpersonal relationships or create new
    relationships to support patients efforts to
    address psychological problems

8
What are the goals of family and couple therapy?
  • Family therapy
  • Parents and children enter therapy as a group
  • Goal is to help family members heal wounds to the
    family, improve communication, and create more
    understanding within the family
  • Couple therapy
  • Goal is to help partners in an intimate
    relationship communicate and manage conflicts
    more effectively
  • May focus on behavioral change or partners
    emotional responses to each other

9
What are some advantages of group therapy?
  • A group of clients (usually seven to ten) meets
    regularly with one or more therapists
  • Provides client with a sense of belonging and
    opportunity to
  • Express feelings
  • Get feedback from other group members
  • Give and receive emotional support
  • Self-help groups
  • People with similar problems who meet regularly,
    usually without a professional therapist

10
Behavior Therapies
  • A treatment approach that is based on the idea
    that abnormal behavior is learned and that
    applies the principles of operant conditioning,
    classical conditioning, and/or observational
    learning to eliminate inappropriate or
    maladaptive behaviors and replace them with more
    adaptive responses

11
How do behavior therapists modify clients
problematic behavior?
  • Uses reinforcement to shape or increase frequency
    of desirable behavior
  • e.g., Token economy
  • Extinguishes undesirable or maladaptive behavior
    by terminating or withholding reinforcement that
    maintains the behavior
  • e.g., Timeout

12
What behavior therapies are based on classical
conditioning and social-cognitive theory?
  • Systematic desensitization is behavior therapy
    based on classical conditioning
  • Used to treat fears
  • Client is trained to relax while being confronted
    with a graduated series of anxiety-producing
    situations
  • Eventually, client can stay relaxed while
    confronting even the most feared situation
  • Participant modeling is behavior therapy based on
    Albert Banduras principles of observational
    learning
  • A model demonstrates appropriate responses to a
    feared stimulus in graduated steps
  • Client then imitates the model with encouragement
    of a therapist
  • Using this technique, most specific phobias can
    be extinguished in 3 to 4 hours

13
What behavior therapies are based on classical
conditioning and social-cognitive theory?
  • Flooding is behavior therapy based on classical
    conditioning
  • Used to treat phobias by exposing clients to the
    feared object or event for an extended period,
    until their anxiety decreases
  • Exposure and response prevention is behavior
    therapy
  • Exposes patients with obsessive-compulsive
    disorder to stimuli that trigger obsessions and
    compulsive rituals, while patients resist
    performing the compulsive rituals for
    progressively longer periods of time
  • Aversion therapy is behavior therapy
  • An aversive stimulus is paired with a harmful or
    socially undesirable behavior until the behavior
    becomes associated with pain or discomfort

14
Cognitive Therapies
  • Therapies that assume maladaptive behavior can
    result from irrational thoughts, beliefs, and
    ideas

15
What is the aim of rational emotive therapy?
  • Developed by Albert Ellis
  • A directive form of therapy
  • Goal is to challenge and modify a clients
    irrational beliefs about themselves and others
  • Which are believed to be the causes of personal
    distress

16
How does Becks cognitive therapy help people
overcome depression and panic disorder?
  • Cognitive therapy, designed by Aaron Beck, helps
    clients stop their negative thoughts as they
    occur and replace them with more objective
    thoughts
  • Depression is treated by brief cognitive therapy,
    usually 10-20 sessions, and is more effective
    than antidepressant drugs
  • Panic disorder is treated by teaching clients to
    change the catastrophic interpretations of their
    symptoms to prevent them from escalating into
    panic, usually effective with 3 months of
    treatment

17
Biomedical Therapies
  • Therapies (drug, therapy electroconvulsive
    therapy, or psychosurgery) that are based on the
    assumption that psychological disorders are
    symptoms of underlying physical problems

18
What are the advantages and disadvantages of
using drugs to treat psychological disorders?
  • Antipsychotic drugs
  • Prescribed primarily for schizophrenia
  • Used to treat symptoms such as hallucinations,
    delusions, and disorganized behavior
  • Work by inhibiting dopamine activity
  • Lithium
  • Used to treat bipolar disorder
  • Reduces both manic and depressive episodes
  • Antianxiety drugs
  • Benzodiazepines are effective for treating
    generalized anxiety disorder and panic disorder
  • This family of minor tranquilizers includes
    Valium and Xanax

19
What are the advantages and disadvantages of
using drugs to treat psychological disorders?
  • Antidepressant drugs
  • Act as mood elevators for people who are severely
    depressed
  • Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs)
  • Block the reuptake of serotonin, increasing its
    availability at the synapses of the brain
  • Are effective for treating major depression, OCD,
    social phobia, panic disorder, generalized
    anxiety disorder, and binge eating

20
What are the advantages and disadvantages of
using drugs to treat psychological disorders?
  • Drugs can have unpleasant or dangerous side
    effects
  • It is difficult to establish proper dosages
  • Drugs do not cure psychological disorders
  • So relapse is likely if drug therapy is
    discontinued
  • Availability of antipsychotic drugs led to a
    trend away from hospitalization, which may have
    increased homelessness among people with
    schizophrenia

21
What is electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) used for?
  • Electric current is administered to the right
    cerebral hemisphere
  • While patient is under anesthesia
  • Usually reserved for severely depressed patients
    who are suicidal
  • ECT was misused and overused in the 1940s and
    1950s, leading to a bad reputation
  • But it can be a highly effective treatment for
    major depression

22
What is psychosurgery, and for what problems is
it used?
  • Brain surgery performed to alleviate serious
    psychological disorders or unbearable chronic
    pain
  • Lobotomy
  • Severs neural connections between frontal lobes
    and deeper centers involved in emotion
  • No longer performed, because it leaves patients
    in permanent deteriorated condition
  • Cingulotomy
  • Destroys cingulum
  • Can help in extreme cases of OCD
  • Psychosurgery is controversial, and is considered
    experimental and a last resort
  • Because results are unpredictable and permanent

23
Evaluating the Therapies
  • Therapies share many similarities. Therapists
    use a core set of techniques no matter which
    perspective of therapy session they adopt, but at
    the same time, each therapeutic approach has
    elements that distinguish it from others.

24
What therapy, if any, is most effective in
treating psychological disorders?
  • Smith et al. (1980) analyzed 475 studies with
    25,000 clients
  • Found that psychotherapy was better than no
    treatment
  • But no one type of psychotherapy was more
    effective than another
  • Eysenck (1994) reanalyzed the same studies
  • Reported that behavior therapy has a slight
    advantage over other types of therapies

25
What therapy, if any, is most effective in
treating psychological disorders?
  • A large survey of psychotherapy clients conducted
    by Consumer Reports found that
  • Overall, clients believed that they benefited
    substantially from psychotherapy
  • Clients were equally satisfied with therapy
    provided by psychologists, psychiatrists, and
    social workers
  • The longer clients stayed in therapy, the more
    they improved
  • Clients believed that antidepressant and
    antianxiety drugs helped them but overall
    psychotherapy alone worked as well as
    psychotherapy plus drugs

26
The Therapeutic Relationship
  • When establishing a relationship with a
    therapist, it is important to become familiar
    with the various professionals who offer
    therapeutic services.

27
What distinguishes one type of therapist from
another, and what ethical standards are shared by
all types of therapists?
  • A Psychologist
  • Has an advanced degree, usually a doctorate, in
    psychology
  • Clinical psychologists generally diagnose and
    treat psychological disorders
  • Counseling psychologists generally provide
    therapy for normal problems of life, such as
    divorce
  • A Psychiatrist
  • Is a medical doctor
  • Can prescribe drug therapy

28
What distinguishes one type of therapist from
another, and what ethical standards are shared by
all types of therapists?
  • Therapists are forbidden to engage in any kind of
    intimate relationship with a client or anyone
    close to the client
  • They are prohibited from providing therapy to
    former intimate partners
  • They are obligated to use tests that are reliable
    and valid
  • And they must have appropriate training for all
    tests that are used

29
What are the characteristics of culturally
sensitive therapy?
  • An approach to therapy in which knowledge of
    clients cultural backgrounds guides the choice
    of therapeutic interventions
  • This approach emphasizes that cultural variables
    may influence the diagnosis and treatment of
    psychological disorders

30
Why is gender-sensitive therapy important?
  • An approach to therapy that takes into account
    the effects of gender on both the therapists and
    the clients behavior
  • This approach emphasizes how a therapists gender
    biases may affect the techniques that they choose
    and their assessments of clients progress
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