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Download Sample Essay Topics I. Clinical problem(s): psychological
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Sample Essay Topics I. Clinical problem(s): psychological assessment and treatment issues for people with serious psychopathological conditions. II. Social problems: applying clinical psychology to understand or deal with crime, suicide, drugs, “sex” offenses, abuse.... III. Professional issues: past development, present status, future of the profession internationally, nationally, provincially, locally. Discussion Group Topics 1. Does mental illness exist? Szasz vs. Moore 2. Can we recognize it? Rosenhan vs. Spitzer 3. Where does it originate? Rimland: biogenesis vs. psychogenesis Some Good Topics Factors in the treatment of pedophilia: Etiology, therapeutic approach and sex of the psychotherapist. Is megavitamin therapy an effective treatment for Autistic kids? A report on the rapid cycling variant of bipolar illness. Bulimia: Analysis of intervention strategies in terms of efficacy and efficiency for reducing symptoms. Effects of diet on brain serotonin levels. Carbamazepin and Valproate: new therapies for mania. Treatment issues with Obsessive-compulsive disorder. Clinical intervention and the grieving process. Should patients be required to receive ECT? A dilemma: pseudodementia or primary degeneration dementia? Accounting for the onset and episodic nature of Obsessive-compulsive disorder. Geneticist and controversy: the etiological concundrum of bipolar disorders and related riskgroups treatment implications. Are tricyclic antidepressants useful with Major Depressive Disorder in children? Problems in assessing the presence of psychopathology in mentally retarded individuals. Psychopathy and the DSM. Raising the awareness of comorbidity in psychiatric Dx: Anorexia and bulimia, a case in point. Obsessive-compulsive disorder in children. Evolution and delusional disorder. Statistical vs. clinical prediction of dangerousness. Reasons ADHD has been underdiagnosed in the female population. Gender differences in the etiology of schizophrenia. Social support and PTSD: Understanding sexual assault. Postpartum depression: Multidimensional and multicausal disorder. Eye movement desensitization and reprocessing: A critique of the evidence and implications for its use in the Tx of PTSD. Influence of Bill C-30 on the unfit defendent. Ethical dilemas for clinical psychologists in reporting child abuse. Prescription privileges in psychology: Issues and analysis. Contrasting treatments for ADD in children. Role of psychology in head injury rehabilitation. Affective disorder and culdure. A re-examination of Freuds 6 cases. Long term consequences of FAS/FAE. Clinical psychologists as expert witnesses. Cerebral laterality in affective disorders and schizophrenia. Post-traumatic stress disorder: Diagnostic, etiological and therapeutic considerations. Analysis of psychotherapies used by the major theoretical approaches in the treatment of Anorexia. CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGY The Scientist-Practitioner Model Softheartedness: compassion & caring in clinical practice Hardheadedness: curiosity & critical thinking in clinical practice Science and Technology in modern mental health care History Understanding and Intervention: the “re-current millennia” Physical, mental and sociocultural aspects of mental health care The Mental Hospital movement The Psychiatric Revolution The Psychodynamic Model The Mental Health Movement The New Psychiatry The Lesson of History The Apprenticeship Model of the Health Care professions The Scientist-Practitioner Model of Clinical Psychology: Boulder, Colorado (1949) and the limitations of psychological science Vail, Colorado (1973) and the growth of professional schools Salt Lake City (1987) and the modern scene The perils of professionalism Merging models in the modern era: Research production and scholarship/consumption Diversity of training and practice in the modern era The identity of Clinical Psychology: “the application of psychology to people with clinical problems” “Application”: 1. Understanding: description and explanation 2. Intervention: psychotherapy & community intervention 3. Clinical process: human judgment & decision-making “Psychology”: I. The Psychodynamic Model: conflict & its management II. The Learning Model: adaptation & its methods III. The Phenomenological/Humanistic Model: growth & its direction “Clinical Problems”: A. The Theoretical/absolute criterion (diseases, defects & demons) B. The Social/relative norm criterion (deviance, difference & disgust) C. Personal/subjective criterion (distress, dysphoria & despair) The Common-sense criterion: Maladjustment/symptoms (disorder, dysfunction & disability) Some examples: e.g. sexual orientation and the DSM Clinical psychology, counselling and other professions The profession of Clinical Psychology: protecting professional practice and the public A. Protection of Title (Certification/Charter) e.g. Psychologists Act, 1967 (revised, 1983) Psychology Profession Act, 1987 (revised, 1992) B. Protection of Practice (License) Boards of Professional Psychology Standards & Guidelines of practice What should be the minimal requirements? Ethics of practice I. APA principles: then and now II. CPA principles: 1. Dignity of persons 2. Responsible, caring 3. Integrity in relationships 4. Responsibility to society Some examples: e.g., Tarasoff case and the duty to warn/protect Investigation & adjudication of complaints APPLICATION OF PSYCHOLOGY TO EXPLAIN CLINICAL PROBLEMS Example: The case of Mr. A (and Assignment 1) The Models 1. Psychodynamic/conflict model: ...Symptoms serving purposes 2. Learning/adaptation model: ...Symptoms as (mal)adaptations 3. Phenomenological/growth model: ...Symptoms expressing needs Applying the models to explain Mr. A (Anxiety Disorders) 1. Psychodynamic (a dispositional explanation) e.g., neurosis and defense mechanisms (displacement) 2. Learning (a situational explanation) e.g., traumatization and adaptation a. classical conditioning: acquiring aversive reactions b. operant conditioning: escape & avoidance c. cognition: acquiring thoughts & subjective traumatization (expectancy, value, efficacy) 3. Phenomenological (another dispositional explanation) e.g., needs and their frustration (conditions of worth) The limitations of models: Mr. A., reconsidered Procrustes and his bed APPLICATION OF PSYCHOLOGY TO DESCRIBE PEOPLE WITH CLINICAL PROBLEMS The Process of Assessment: old and new 1. Data collection: “data-driven” and “theory-driven” procedures 2. Data combination/processing: human judgment and decision-making 3. Communication: the example of psychological reports The Purpose of assessment: answering questions I. Classification (diagnosis) II. III. Further description questions: 1. Other differences that make a difference 2. Monitoring the course Prediction (prognosis): 1. errors (false positives & false negatives) 2. base rates (the ideal & the reality) Positive & negative predictive power Sensitivity & specificity The Uses of Information: Types of data 1. Simple data: a sample of behaviour (what the client does) 2. Correlates: a descriptive generalization (what the client is) 3. Sign: a theoretical variable (what the client has) Applying assessment techniques to describe Gary Gilmore (The Personality Disorders) 1. Classification: the modern use of psychological tests in diagnosis e.g., ASPD and the psychopath 2. Further assessment: differences that make a difference e.g., the nature of psychopathy 3. Prediction: the implications of errors and base rates e.g., the prediction of dangerousness Clinical Assessment A. The Interview Types 1. intake, history, mental status,.... 2. “pre” & “post” interviews 3. crisis interviews The Process 1. Beginning: the problem & the person (rapport?) 2. Middle: repeated scanning & focussing (bias?) 3. End: the client & the critique (improvements?) Issues: Where, how and what Clinician’s gratification of self Client’s “frame of reference” The example of Gilmore: an interview in forensic practice B. Psychological Testing I. Intellectual Assessment 1. The science of intelligence and the abilities 2. The technology of assessing achievement and aptitude Construct validity: looking for signs Criterion validity (concurrent and predictive): looking for descriptive generalizations Intelligence A, B and C: genotype, phenotype and observation Achievement, aptitude and ability: sample, correlate and sign Clinical purposes of intellectual assessment 1. Classification: Mental retardation and beyond 2. Further questions: “general intellectual level” and other specific applications 3. Prediction: limitations of aptitude and “the twisted pear” Practical vs theoretical questions in intellectual assessment II. Personality assessment 1. The sciences of personality (temperament/emotion and motivation/needs) 2. The test technologies for research and practical purposes The problem of personality theory and assessment e.g., aggression, suicide & sexual behavior The solutions 1. The “Scientific”/Objective Test approach: reliability first, find relevance (validity) later Examples: a. Samples/correlates: MMPI, CPI b. Signs: 16PF, EPQ, NEO-PI The assessment of temperament & emotion (and “response sets”) Problem: What good is a highly reliable test if it is not relevant to your needs? 2. The “Practical”/Projective Test approach: potential relevance first, improve reliability later Examples: a. Associations: Rorschach b. Constructions: TAT c. Completions: Sentence Completion d. Choices/ordering: Q-sort e. Expressions: DAP, HTP & beyond The assessment of needs & motives (and their “projection”) Problem: What good is a highly relevant test if you can’t determine when and how it is relevant? Clinical purposes of personality assessment 1. Classification: Personality disorders and beyond 2. Further questions: assessing “temperament”, “motivation” and other specific applications 3. Prediction: limitations of predictability and “behavioral specificity” Practical vs. theoretical questions in personality assessment The issue of incremental validity The example of Gilmore: intellectual & personality assessment in forensic practice 1. Classification? 2. Further questions? 3. Prediction? III. Observational assessment Types 1. naturalistic observation 2. controlled (e.g., ‘reactive/performance” and active/”role-playing”) observation 3. self-monitoring Problems and their solutions Reliability: standardization of observational assessments (and “observer drift”) Relevance/validity: a. Observer Bias: Rashomon Effect, “blind” research and the “Halo Effect” in practice b. Reactivity of the Observed: Hawthorne Effect, “double blind” research and the “Hello/Goodbye Effect” in practice Improving the validity of observational assessment: “the law of small numbers” The issue of ecological validity The example of Gilmore: observational assessment in forensic practice 1. 2. 3. Classification? Further questions? Prediction? CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGY: “the application of people with clinical problems” psychology to The application to understanding (description and explanation) The application to intervention (psychotherapy and community intervention) APPLICATION OF PSYCHOLOGY TO THE PROCESS OF CLINICAL JUDGMENT AND DECISION-MAKING “Bounded rationality” and the falliability of human judgments and decision-making (Herb Simon, Paul Meehl, Kahneman & Tversky) 1. Data collection 2. Data combination/processing a. Variation & the context of conjecture b. Selection & the context of confirmation 3. Communication The falliability of clinical intuition: the illusion of expertise and “the clinician’s paradox” The Debate: Clinical/impressionistic/“intuitive” methods vs Statistical/actuarial/“cookbook” methods Some examples in health care and in daily life The Research Clinical judgments in daily practice: too fast, too fixed and too firm Clinical vs. “actuarial” alternatives: complexity & simplicity in practice (e.g., moderator variables”) TYPICAL ERRORS 1. The Confirmation Bias (and the belief perseverance phenomenon) e.g., evidence “in support of” belief 2. Overconfidence (the “optimistic bias”) A. Irrelevant made relevant (e.g., underestimating risk) B. Relevant made irrelevant (e.g., confidence intervals) 3. Framing (the “rhetorical bias”) 4. Availability Heuristic (and the post hoc explanation fallacy) A. Samples (e.g., anchoring bias) B. Correlates (e.g., spurious correlations) 5. Representativeness Heuristic (“Theoretical Bias”) e.g., illusory correlations A. Insensitivity to BR (Prior Probabilities) e.g., incremental validity and the P.T. Barnum Effect B. Insensitivity to N (Law of Small Numbers) e.g., ecological validity and the FAE C. Insensititivity to Reliability (vs. Relevance/Validity) e.g., potential validity of projective/objective tests D. Insensitivity to Prior Probability in Prediction (“Regression to the Mean”) e.g., predictive validity of rare events Mental Set (and “Functional Fixedness”) e.g., “pathologizing set” in understanding e.g., “fixedness” in assessment and therapy Common Fallacies 6. mind”) 1. “Sick-sick” 2. “Me too” 3. “Uncle George’s pancakes” 4. “Multiple Napoleons” 5. “Understanding makes it normal” 6. “Confusing content/cause” 7. Clinical/Statistical significance (“Neglect of overlap”) 8. Clinicians Gratification of Self (“Hidden decisions”) 9. Client’s Frame of reference (“Spun-glass theory of the 10. Case/Context (“Uniqueness and probability”) Communication Psychological Reports: clear, relevant, useful 1. P.T. Barnum Report 2. Polyanna Report 3. Prosecuting Attorney Brief 4. Madison Avenue Report 5. Cookbook Report 6. Safe-hedge Report 7. Aunt Fanny Description Primary and secondary receivers Feedback APPLICATION OF PSYCHOLOGY TO INTERVENTION WITH PEOPLE WHO HAVE CLINICAL PROBLEMS: 1. Psychotherapy 2. Community Intervention Historical Conxted: the “recurrent millennia” and the recent “revolutions” Prevention: primary, secondary, and tertiary Interventions: universal, selective and indicated Promoting health: risk reduction and resilience Problem with primary prevention: in principle and in practice Modern prevention science: some examples a. social problems drugs, parents, violence b. psychiatric problems anxiety and depressive disorders I. PSYCHOTHERAPY Example: The case of Mrs. B. (and Assignment 3) The Process 1. Beginning: the problem & the person (and the past?) 2. Middle: the strategy & the tactics (and tactical 3. End: evaluation techniques (and was it effective?) change?) The Tactics I. “The detective” (Exploratory Tactics): the past e.g. psychoanalysis II. “The coach” (Directive Tactics): the present e.g. behavior & cognitive therapies III. “The friend” (Experiential Tactics): the future e.g. client centered therapy Strategy and tactics Psychotherapy as a relationship and its personal implications I. PSYCHODYNAMIC TACTICS Theory: conflict Therapy: insight e.g. analysis of resistance, transference, etc., to catharsis Issue: historical/narrative truth II. LEARNING TACTICS Theory: adaptation Therapy: a. classical conditioning ? behavior b. Operant conditioning ? therapy c. cognitive therapy (“rational restructuring”) From radical & methodological behaviorism to logical & neo- behaviorism From behavior modification to behavior therapy CONDITIONING/BEHAVIOR THERAPIES Classical Conditioning Extinction Counterconditioning Exposure: flooding + “implosion” (+ habituation) Aversive conditioning Appetitive conditioning Combinations Systematic desensitization “Systematic sensitization” Operant Conditioning R÷SR Punishment (response suppression & penalties) R÷SP Reward (shaping & rehearsal procedures) R*÷SR Contingency management: “token economies” and other contracting procedures COGNITIVE THERAPIES a. Deductive/logical: “rational restructuring” (e.g., RET) b. Inductive/empirical: other cognitive tactics (e.g., CT) Issue: generalizability (across people and places) and the “Over Justification Effect” III. HUMANISTIC/PHENOMENOLOGICAL TACTICS Therapy: growth Therapy: “client-centered” methods (e.g., unconditional positive regard) Also, Existential tactics (“Logotherapy”) Gestalt tactics” Issue: strategy (setting & achieving goals) INTERPERSONAL & GROUP THERAPIES 1. Psychodynamic examples: “transactional analysis” “psychodrama” and 2. Learning examples: “social skills training” and “modelling” 3. Humanistic examples: “encounter groups” and beyond “The Curative Factors” Catharsis Universality Recapitulation (of the family) Altruism Technique Interpersonal knowledge Validation Existential awareness Guidance Acceptance (cohesion) Imitation New hope The Evolution of Family Therapy 1. Family ÿ problem? 2. Problem ÿ Family! 3. Person ø Family EXAMPLE OF PSYCHOTHERAPY: THE DEPRESSIVE DISORDERS Cases: Dx and assessment Tx and psychotherapy Diagnostic alternatives ORGANIC? ÷ OBS? • DRUGS? BIPOLAR? ÷ MD? • cyclothymia? DEEP? ÷ adjustment disorder? dysthymia? • (primary/secondary) MDD simple or recurrent episode? mild, moderate or severe (psychotic symptoms)? • melancholic or non-melancholic? COMORBIDITY? e.g. DRUGS? PERSONALITY? “DOUBLE DEPRESSION”? Therapeutic alternatives BIOMEDICAL? ÷ ECT? DRUGS? PSYCHOTHERAPY? 1. Psychoanalytic (personality change by insight) 2. Learning - classical (stimulus ÷ response change) operant (response ÷ reward change) cognitive (belief change) 3. Humanistic (personality change by growth) Also, Interpersonal therapies (e.g. IPT) Weeping Widow Disappointed Decorator Lonesome Mistress Learning to cope Death of a Family The Bell Jar Black Bile Mr. N. Perpetual Patient A case of Identity Sins of the Past Demented Missionary Death of a Salesclerk APPLICATION OF PSYCHOLOGY TO INTERVENTION WITH PEOPLE WHO HAVE CLINICAL PROBLEMS II. COMMUNITY INTERVENTION History: “the recurrent millenia,” revisited The advent of professional authority and expertise in mental health care The First Revolution: The Mental Hospital Movement The Rise of Psychiatry: “The Psychiatric Revolution” The Second Revolution: Psychoanalytic The Third Revolution: (Community) Mental Health Movement The Rise of the “New Psychiatry” The Fourth Revolution? Prevention.... Prevention Primary: its problems in principle and in practice Secondary: innovations in crisis intervention and family therapy Tertiary: new directions in relapse prevention and sociotherapy EXAMPLE OF COMMUNITY INTERVENTION: THE SCHIZOPHRENIAS AND (ASSIGNMENT 4) Cases: Dx and assessment Tx and community interventions Diagnostic alternatives SCHIZOPHRENIA Paranoid, disorganized, catatonic, undifferentiated, residual? “Positive” or “deficit” type? Chronic, episodic? Therapeutic alternatives BIOMEDICAL? ÷ Antipsychotics? Clozapine? COMMUNITY? ÷ 1. Milieu Therapy (ward) 2. Sociotherapy (world) 3. Family Therapy (home) Everything belongs to God Never Say Die The Relapsing Patient Another Dimension The Road is Long Star Wars The Never-ending Story The Bully EVALUATION OF PSYCHOTHERAPY (and other interventions) History 1. Tactic vs. SR: average differences in effectiveness? e.g. Eysenck, 1952 2. Tactic vs. tactic: differences in variability of effectiveness? e.g. Temple University, 1975 3. Strategic research: differences that make a difference? e.g. NIMH, 1987 Incremental effectiveness and efficiency (time, cost) Methods of evaluation I. Within subjects (reversal designs) II. Between groups (factorial designs) Internal and external validity (analogue research) Results: the BIG picture (meta-analysis) Effect sizes Statistical vs clinical significance Ethics in evaluative research Modern “patched-up” designs Applications of research