Title: COGNITIVE%20BEHAVIORAL%20THERAPY
1COGNITIVE BEHAVIORAL THERAPY
- Ann Olincy, M.D.
- Associate Professor of Psychiatry
2Uses of Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT)
- Any disorder with distortions in thinking or
dysfunctional behavior - Anxiety disorders
- Post traumatic stress disorder
- Panic disorder
- Obsessive/compulsive disorder
- Depression
- Schizophrenia
- Personality disorders
3First Step Learning
- Begin with education about the illness
- Symptoms
- Causes
- Heredity
- Childhood circumstances
- Stress
- Triggers
- Brain chemicals
- Medical conditions
4Second step Identify Things That Maintain The
Thoughts/Behaviors
- Avoidance
- Self talk-what you say in your mind
- Mistaken beliefs-thoughts about yourself and your
life - Withheld feelings-anger, frustration, sadness
- Lack of assertiveness
5Second step Identify Things That Maintain The
Thoughts/Behaviors
- Lack of self-nurturing skills
- Muscle tension
- Stimulants or other diet factors
- High stress lifestyle
- Lack of sense of purpose
6Third Step Identify Things That May Help In
Recovery
- Physical
- Medical (medications)
- Relaxation
- Nutrition/diet
- Emotional
- Express suppressed feelings
- Behavioral
- Confront the things you avoid
7Third Step Identify Things That May Help In
Recovery
- Mental
- Counter negative self-talk
- Interpersonal
- Build strong, supportive relationships
- Whole level
- Improve self esteem
8Third Step Identify Things That May Help In
Recovery
- Mental
- Counter negative self-talk
- Interpersonal
- Build strong, supportive relationships
- Whole level
- Improve self esteem
9Third Step Identify Things That May Help In
Recovery
- Existential/spiritual
- Find a broad purpose or direction in their life
that gives a person meaning - Take responsibility for your problems
- Examining motivations for illness and overcoming
secondary gains - Willingness to take risks
- Make a commitment to change
10Fourth Step Learn How to Cope
- Deflate the danger-face symptoms dont run from
them - Coping statements
- This feeling isnt comfortable but I can handle
it. - This isnt the worst thing that could happen.
- This will pass.
- These are just thoughts-not reality.
- Nothing serious is going to happen to me.
11Fourth Step Learn How to Cope
- Explore the antecedents and identify preliminary
signs to preempt a full blown episode - Do something that requires focused concentration
to draw your attention from the uncomfortable
feelings
12Fourth Step Learn How to Cope
- Express your emotions
- Practice thought stopping-shout stop it or if
others are around, visualize a stop sign - Relaxation
13Relaxation Benefits
- Decrease heart rate, respiratory rate, blood
pressure, muscle tension, metabolic rate, oxygen
consumption, analytical thinking - Increase energy and productivity, concentration
and memory
14Relaxation Benefits
- Decrease insomnia and fatigue
- Decrease psychosomatic disorders
- Increase self-confidence
- Increase availability of feelings
15Relaxation Techniques
- Abdominal breathing
- Progressive muscle relaxation
- Visualizing a peaceful scene
- Meditation
- Guided imagery
- Biofeedback
- Sensory deprivation
- Physical exercise
16Fifth Step Behaviors- Desensitization
- Imagery desensitization
- Unlearning the connection between emotion and
particular situation - Visualize yourself in the situation that is
disturbing and then practice relaxation - Hierarchical-pick the least disturbing that you
can tolerate and work up to the most disturbing
when these are conquered
17Desensitization
- Real-life desensitization
- Put yourself in a real situation that is
disturbing and practice tolerating the feelings - Set goals for recovery
- Use a support person at the beginning
- Be aware of elements that make you anxious
18Desensitization
- Real-life desensitization
- Be willing to take risks
- Be willing to tolerate discomfort
- Avoid flooding (overexposure with lack of control
over your emotions) - Plan for contingencies-things do go wrong
19Desensitization
- Real life
- Trust your own pace
- Reward yourself for small successes
- Use positive coping statements
- Expect and know how to handle setbacks
- Be prepared to experience strong emotions
20Sixth Step Cognitions-Self-talk
- Automatic and subtle
- One image or word contains scores of memories,
thoughts, associations - Can be irrational but sounds like the truth
- Are learned
- Perpetuates avoidance
21Types of Self-talk
- Worrier
- Imagines the worst case scenario, overestimates
the bad, creates images of catastrophe - What if
- Critic
- Points out flaws, limits,
- You stupid
22Types of Self-talk
- Victim
- Helpless, hopeless, something inherently wrong
- I cant
- Ill never be able to
- Perfectionist
- Efforts not good enough, intolerant of mistakes
or setbacks - I should
- I must
23Cognitive Distortions
- Filtering
- Focus on the negative aspect of a situation
- Worthless, hopeless, pointless, stupid, failure,
dangerous, unfair - Emotional reasoning
- Judge illogically only on basis of own feelings
- Should statements
- Should, must, have to
24Types Of Unrealistic Thinking-Cognitive
Distortions
- Overestimating odds of negative outcome
- Catastrophizing
- Terrible, insufferable, catastrophic
- Over generalizing
- One bad experience will repeat itself
- Never, always, all, every, none, no one, nobody,
everyone, everything
25Mistaken Beliefs
- Im powerless
- Life is a struggle
- If I take a risk Ill fail
- I should always look and act good no matter how I
feel - If I worry enough this problem will get better
26Mistaken Beliefs
- I cant cope with difficult situations
- The outside world is dangerous
- My needs dont matter
- Im worthless
- Im unlovable
27Challenging Mistaken Beliefs
- What is the evidence for the belief?
- Is this invariably or always true?
- Does this look at the whole picture?
- Does this promote well-being?
- Did I choose this belief on my own?
28Positive Counterstatements
- The worrier
- So what
- The critic
- Im ok the way I am
- I accept and believe in myself
- The victim
- Its never too late to change
- The perfectionist
- Its ok to make mistakes
29Positive Counterstatements
- Write down and rehearse
- Examine the evidence
- What are the odds of this really happening?
- Is this always true?
- What is the worst that could happen?
- Am I looking at the whole picture?
- Am I fully objective?
30Daily Record of Dysfunctional Thoughts
Date Situation Emotions Automatic Thoughts Rational Response Outcome
Describe Actual event leading to unpleasant emotion Specify emotion Write automatic thought that preceded emotion Write rational response to automatic thought Re-rate belief in automatic thought 0-100
Stream of thoughts leading to unpleasant emotion Rate degree of emotion 0-100 Rate belief in automatic thoughts 0-100 Rate belief in rational response 0-100 Specify and rate subsequent emotions 0-100