Download Unit 16 - Treatment of Psychological Disorders (pgs.584-619)

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Transcript
5/14/15
Psychological Therapies
Psychotherapy
•  An interaction between a trained therapist and
someone seeking to overcome psychological
difficulties or achieve personal growth.
Eclectic Approach
•  Form of therapy where the therapist
combines techniques from different forms of
therapy. Kind of like a smorgasbord.
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Psychoanalysis
•  Sigmund Freud's therapeutic technique.
•  Uses free association, hypnosis and dream
interpretation to gain insight into the
client’s unconscious.
Psychoanalytic Methods
•  Psychotherapists use their techniques to
overcome resistance (the blocking from
consciousness of anxiety-laden material).
• The psychoanalyst’s goal is for you to become
aware of the resistance and together interpret
it’s underlying meaning to gain self-insight.
Transference
•  In psychoanalysis, the
patient transfers to the
analyst emotions linked
with other relationships.
• 
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b02H0dW2xf8
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Alternative Therapies
•  Seasonal Affective
Disorder is depression
experienced during
the winter months.
•  Based not on
temperature, but on
amount of sunlight.
•  Treated with light
therapy.
Humanistic Therapy
•  Focuses of people’s
potential for selffulfillment (selfactualization).
•  Focuses on the present
and future.
•  Focuses on conscious
thoughts (not
unconscious ones).
•  Take responsibility for
you actions.
Client (Person) Centered Therapy
•  Developed by Carl Rogers.
•  Therapist should use
genuineness, acceptance and
empathy to show
unconditional positive
regard towards their
clients.
•  Most widely used Humanistic
technique.
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Active Listening
•  Central to Roger’s
client-centered therapy.
•  Empathetic listening
where the therapist
echoes, restates and
clarifies the clients
thoughts and feelings.
Behavior Therapies
•  The goal of this type of therapy is to apply learning
principles to the elimination of unwanted behaviors.
• The behaviors are the problems - so we must
change the behaviors.
Classical Conditioning Techniques
Counterconditioning:
•  A behavioral therapy that conditions new
responses to stimuli that trigger unwanted
behaviors.
Two Types: Exposure Therapies & Aversive
Conditioning
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1. Exposure Therapies
•  Systematic desensitization - type of
counterconditioning that associates a pleasant
relaxed state with gradually increasing,
anxiety-triggering stimuli. (i.e. phobias)
How would I use systematic
desensitization to reduce my
fear of old women?
Systematic Desensitization uses…
progressive relaxation versus
Flooding which…
exposes you to an anxiety-provoking
situation at the highest level of fear all at
once.
Virtual Reality Exposure Therapy
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2. Aversive Conditioning
•  A type of counterconditioning that associates an unpleasant
state (nausea) with an unwanted behavior (alcoholism).
Example – putting peppers on a nail biters fingernails.
Aversive Conditioning
Operant Conditioning
Token Economy: an operant conditioning procedure
that rewards a desired behavior.
A patient exchanges a token of some sort (earned for exhibiting
the desired behavior) for various privileges or treats.
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Cognitive Therapy
Cognitive Therapy
•  Cognitive therapists try to
teach people new, more
constructive ways of thinking.
Is .300 a good or bad
batting average?
Cognitive Therapy
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Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy
•  Integrative therapy that
combines changing selfdefeating thinking with
changing inappropriate
behaviors.
Cognitive Therapy - Does It Work?
Group & Family Therapies
(i.e. Alcoholics Anonymous, etc.)
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Group Therapy
•  Advantages – help more
people in less time; less
expensive; and you can
discover that others have
problems similar to yours.
Family Therapy
•  Views and in individual’s
unwanted behaviors as
influenced by or directed at
other family members.
•  Attempts to guide the
family toward positive
relationships.
Biomedical Therapies
Therapies aimed at changing the brain’s functioning
with prescribed drugs, electroconvulsive therapy, or
surgery.
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Psychopharmacology
•  The study of the effects of drugs
on mind and behavior.
Drugs and Hospitalization
Emptying of Mental Hospitals
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Testing New Drugs
•  When a new drug is released there is always
too much enthusiasm.
• Must use a double-blind procedure to combat
placebo and experimental effects.
Types of drugs include:
Antipsychotic Drugs
•  Medicines used to treat
psychosis - typically in
schizophrenia and bipolar
patients.
•  Thorazine - although effective
often has powerful side effects
(blocks the activity of dopamine).
•  Tardive dyskinesia – neurotoxic
effect involving involuntary
movements of the facial muscles,
tongue, and limbs.
Antianxiety Drugs
•  Includes drugs like Valium,
Librium and Xanax.
•  Used to treat people
undergoing significant stress
or anxiety disorders.
•  Most widely abused
prescription drugs.
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Antidepressant Drugs
•  Lift you up out of depression.
•  Most increase the availability
of norepinephrine or serotonin.
•  Prozac, Paxil & Zoloft are
known as SSRI’s (selectiveserotonin-reuptake-inhibitors)
and block serotonin reuptake.
•  Lithium is an effective mood
stabilizer used by those with
bipolar disorder.
Prozac, Paxil & Zoloft
Electroconvulsive Therapy (ECT)
•  Therapy for major
depression in which a brief
electric current is sent
through the brain of a
patient causing a mild
seizure.
•  Usually produces temporary
memory loss.
•  But has been very effective
of temporarily ridding
people of suicidal thoughts.
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Alternative to ECT
•  Repetitive transcranial
magnetic stimulation
(rTMS).
•  Application of magnetic
energy to the brain.
•  Doesn’t produce
seizures or memory
loss.
•  Still waiting for
conclusive data.
Psychosurgery
•  Egas Moniz developed the
lobotomy in the 1930’s and
it became very popular in
the 40’s and 50’s.
•  Surgery that removes or
destroys frontal lobe brain
tissue in an effort to
change behavior.
•  Ice pick like instrument
through the eye sockets
cutting the links between
the frontal lobes and the
emotional control centers.
Lobotomy
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_0aNILW6ILk
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