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Psychotherapy: healing of the soul Early beliefs: troubled people— possessed by demons Later term: mental illness Mental illness: no longer considered an appropriate term Implies a passive, helpless person Problems caused by forces over which she/he has no control Person can avoid responsibility The primary goal of psychotherapy is to strengthen the patient’s control over his/ her life People who feel trapped in behavior patterns Psychological conditions cause a lack of freedom with limited options in choosing directions lives will take For psychotherapy to work, the client (patient) must achieve some understanding of his/her troubles Another major task of therapy is to help the patient find meaningful alternatives to his present unsatisfactory way of behaving Key factor: patient’s belief or hope that he can change One danger in therapy is that sometimes patients become heavily dependent on therapists Patients often try to avoid problems by using the therapist as a substitute parent or by blaming him for their misfortunes Patients who get the most out of psychotherapy are people with high intelligence, good education and middle class backgrounds Identify closely with their therapists Those who benefit most: relatively mild problems; introspective; withstand frustration Differences from old stereotype Wide range of problems besides the serious DSM-IV disorders Action, as well as talk & interpretation Trust Client and therapist must be able to work together as allies, on the same side, toward same goals Therapeutic process Some or all: Identifying the problem Identifying the cause of the problem Deciding on and carrying out some form of treatment Three characteristics of effective therapists: Psychologically healthy Empathy—a capacity for warmth and understanding Experienced in dealing with people See through patients’ games played to trick therapists Kinds of therapists Clinical psychologists: therapists with Ph.D.; have completed a 3-4 year research-oriented program in psychology plus an internship in psychotherapy and psychological assessment; some have a Psy.D: a Doctor of Psychology Kinds of therapists Counseling psychologists: masters or Ph.D. in counseling; usually work in educational institutions; work dealing with personal problems Clinical neuropsychologists: Ph.D. with education similar to clinical psychologists; extensive education in mechanisms & operation of the brain; work with brain injury patients Kinds of therapists Psychiatrists: M.D. who specialize in treatment of mental illness; post-graduate training in abnormal behavior; licensed to prescribe medicines & only group who can perform operations Kinds of therapists Psychoanalysts—M.D.; training in personality theory & techniques of Sigmund Freud. Must be psychoanalyzed themselves before practice Kinds of therapists Lay analysts: psychoanalysts who do not have degrees in medicine but who have studied with established psychoanalysts Psychiatric social workers: people with masters degrees in social work Paraprofessionals: clergy, physicians, teachers, others who dispense considerable advice with little or no formal training in therapy or counseling Kinds of therapists Psychiatrists: The American Psychological Association is presently discussing recommending a regulation change that would permit psychologists to prescribe medication Kinds of psychotherapy Insight therapy: help people understand their problems— change thoughts, motives, feelings Behavioral: focuses primarily on change in behavior Insight Therapy Attempts to change people on the inside—the way they think and feel AKA talk therapies—share the assumption that distressed persons need to develop an understanding of the disordered thoughts, emotions, and motives that underlie their mental difficulties Kinds of psychotherapy Psychoanalysis Based on Freud’s theories Basis: anxiety about hidden conflicts between the unconscious components of one’s personality Kinds of psychotherapy Psychoanalysis Provide insight: patient awareness of unconscious impulses, desires, and fears that are causing the anxiety Slow procedure—assists patient in a thorough examination of the unconscious motives behind behavior Psychoanalysis Psychoanalysis begins with free association: talk about everything that comes into her mind Analyst suggests that the patient express everything that comes to mind—even what apparently is inconsequential may have a bearing on the problem Patient comfortable; analyst often says little or nothing; just asks guiding questions Psychoanalysis Usually, at first, the patient is reluctant to reveal painful feelings and to examine lifelong patterns that need to be changed Resistance: unconsciously holding back information Psychoanalysis Eventually, the analyst begins to appear in the patient’s associations & dreams Process of Transference—begins to feel toward the analyst what she/he feels toward other important people in her/his life Psychoanalysis Transference: may allow the patient to experience true feelings toward the important person Therapist must remain impersonal to prevent the patient from treating the therapist as he/ she would the important person Psychoanalysis By eventually understanding transference, the patient becomes aware of real feelings and motives One danger: can lead to symptom substitution—one symptom disappears only to be replaced by another Neo-Freudian Psychodynamic Theories Treat face-to-face Once a week for a few months Don’t spend as much time probing for hidden conflicts and repressed memories Also: ego rather than id Influence of life experiences post-childhood Role of social needs/interpersonal relations The most eclectic form of therapy Existential crises: Problems in everyday existence Low self-esteem Feelings of alienation Failure to achieve all you feel you should Difficult relationships Humanist Theories People motivated by healthy needs for growth and psychological wellbeing Focus on the whole person engaged in a continual process of change Therapies help clients confront their problems by recognizing their own freedom, enhancing self-esteem, and realizing fullest potential Humanist Theories Carl Rogers Stressed actualization of a person’s unique potential through personal responsibility, freedom of choice, and authentic relationships Rogers: person centered therapy Humanist Theories People are basically good and capable of handling their own lives Goals of therapy: help client realize his own strength & confidence; be able to live effectively by being true to own standards and ideas Therapist encourages the client to speak freely about intimate matters that may be bothering him. Therapist: listens and encourages conversation, but avoids giving opinions Therapist tries to echo back as clearly as possible the feelings the client has expressed Client and therapist together form a clearer picture of how client feels about himself, his life & people around him. Person-centered therapy is conducted in an atmosphere of emotional support—unconditional positive regard Therapist never says what she thinks about the client Therapist shows the client that she will accept anything said without embarrassment Warm and accepting relationship As the client reduces tensions, and releases emotions, feels that he/she is becoming a more complete person. Gains courage to accept parts of personality he/she formerly considered weak or bad, and by recognizing his/her self worth & can then set realistic goals & consider steps needed to meet them Cognitive Therapies Focus on changing the way people think Basic assumption: faulty cognitions—irrational or uninformed beliefs, expectations, and ways of thinking—distort our actions, attitudes, and emotions To improve lives, people need to change thinking patterns Cognitive-Behavior Therapy Aaron T. Beck Use persuasion and logic to change the patient’s existing beliefs Encourage patients to test their own beliefs through “homework” assignments Group Therapy Practical experience in getting along with others Can see how other people are struggling with problems similar to theirs Also discover what others think of them People can express what they think of others in the group—can see mistakes in views of self and of others & see where correct Group Therapy Factors that make group therapy effective: Hope Universality Information Altruism Modeling Corrective recreation of primary family social skills Factors that make group therapy effective: Interpersonal learning Group cohesiveness Catharsis—people can express feelings and vulnerability Existential factors Group Therapy Examples of self-help groups Alcoholics Anonymous Weight Watchers Mutual encouragement, friendship, emphasis on person responsibility Group Therapy Other forms of group therapy Family therapy—untangle twisted webs of relationships that have led one or more members in the family to experience emotional suffering Self-help groups—people who share a common problem, often conducted without the active involvement of professional therapists Behavior Therapy Much more emphasis on action Therapist concentrates more on finding out what is specifically wrong with the patient’s current life and takes steps to change it Concept: disturbed people have learned to behave in the wrong way Therapist must, therefore, re-educate the patient Reasons for undesirable behavior not important; What is important: change behavior Therapist uses conditioning techniques first discovered on animals in laboratories Mary Cover Jones (1924) Desensitized “Peter’s” intense fear of a rabbit Classical conditioning in humans Hobart & Mollie Mowrer (1938) Bed-wetting: the bell and pad Alarm = UCS Waking = UR Full bladder = CS UCS + CS= Child wakes (CR) One behavior therapy technique: systematic desensitization Used to overcome irrational fears and anxieties the patient has Joseph Wolpe learned Goal: encourage patients to imagine the feared situation while relaxing, thus extinguishing the fear response Example: intense fear of public speaking Therapist might have student make a list of all aspects of talking with others that are frightening Next, patient rank orders those fears—most to least frightening Next, the therapist begins teaching the patient how to relax Consider this hierarchy of fears constructed by a person who is fearful of death 1. Seeing a dead person in a coffin 2. Being at a burial 3. Seeing a distant burial assemblage 4. Reading the obituary of a young person who died of a heart attack 5. Driving past a cemetery 6. Seeing a funeral 7. Passing a funeral home 8. Reading the obituary of an old person 9. Being inside a hospital 10. Seeing an ambulance Once patient knows how to really relax: next step Patient tries to imagine as vividly as possible the least disturbing thing on the list. May think that speaking to a single stranger and feel a mild anxiety. Because therapist has taught him how to relax, the the patient learns to think about the experience without fear. Counter conditioning: therapist attempts to replace anxiety with its opposite— relaxation Follow that procedure step-by-step through the patient’s list of anxiety-arousing events Patient reaches a point where he is able to imagine the situations that threaten him the most without feeling anxiety Systematic Desensitization Next the therapist starts to expose the patient to real-life situations that have previously frightened him. Continues until the client can give a speech in front of an audience Virtual Reality and Systematic Desensitization Computer-generated images expose phobic patients to fearful situations in a safe virtual reality environment Aversion therapy Drug addiction, certain sexual attractions, tendencies to violence Designed to make tempting stimuli less provocative by pairing by pairing them with unpleasant (aversive) stimuli Behavior therapy Contingency Management Therapist & patient decide what old, undesirable behavior needs to disappear and what new, desirable behavior needs to appear. Behavior therapy Contingency Management Next, arrangements are made to reinforce desired behavior and for old behavior to go unrewarded Reward is contingent (dependent) on the desired behavior Therapy group project Write a script for and be prepared to act out a therapy session Psychoanalysis for histrionic personality disorder Person (client)-centered therapy for hypochondriasis Cognitive-Behavior therapy for depression Family therapy for a dysfunctional family Couples therapy (marital problems) Systematic desensitization for a panic disorder Participant Modeling therapy for a phobia. Behavior therapy Contingency Management Used in mental hospitals and prisons—miniature system of rewards called token economies Participant Modeling Therapy People learn fears by observing others Client observes or imitates another person who is modeling desirable behaviors Symbolic modeling Desensitization therapy Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy Combines a cognitive emphasis on thoughts and attitudes with behavioral strategies (dual approach) Therapist and client work together to: Modify irrational self-talk Set attainable behavioral goals Develop realistic strategies Evaluate results Rational-Emotive Therapy Albert Ellis People behave in deliberate, rational ways, given their assumptions about life. Emotional problems arise when an individual’s assumptions are unrealistic Therapist does not look for past incidents that make the present unbearable for the patient Rational-Emotive Therapy Goal: to correct a patient’s false and self defeating beliefs. Rejection is unpleasant, but not unbearable Goal: teach the individual to think in realistic terms Rational-Emotive Therapy Therapy techniques: Role-playing—see how beliefs affect relationships Modeling—to demonstrate other ways of thinking and acting Humor—to underline the absurdity of beliefs Simple persuasion Rational-Emotive Therapy Ellis: patient must take three steps to cure or correct self Realize that some of his assumptions are false Must realize that he/she is making himself/herself disturbed by acting on false beliefs Must work to break old habits of thought and behavior Must practice, learn self-discipline, and take risks Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy Changes people’s minds as well as changing the brain itself Re-label experiences as obsessions or compulsions rather than rational thinking Wait out urges by distracting themselves for about 15 minutes Over time, part of brain responsible for irrational fears becomes less active Consumer Reports Therapy works Long-term better than short term All forms are about equal in effectiveness Hans Eysenck Roughly two-thirds of all people with nonpsychotic problems recover within two years of the onset of the problem, whether they get therapy or not Two conclusions: Therapy is more effective than none Eysenck had over-estimated the improvement rate in no-therapy control groups Long-term administration: tardive dyskinesia incurable disturbance of motor control, especially of facial muscles Long-term administration: tardive dyskinesia incurable disturbance of motor control, especially of facial muscles Antidepressants relieve depression Tricyclic (Tofranil and Elavil) reduce the neuron’s re-absorption of neurotransmitters after they have been released in the synapse in the brain cells (reuptake) Prozac (1987)—for many years most popular antidepressant; Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) Antidepressants relieve depression Monoamine Oxidase (MAO) inhibitors: limit the activity of MAO— a chemical that breaks down norepinephrine in the synapse MAO inhibitors are a common somatic treatment for depression Biological approaches to treatment Antidepressants (continued) Lithium carbonate, a natural chemical element, is now widely used to return manic-depressive patients to a state of equilibrium in which extreme mood swings disappear Most medications have side effects Stimulants to Treat ADHD Ignorance of well-established calming effect these drugs can have in children with ADHD Interferes with normal sleep patterns Slow growth of children Potential for abuse Prefrontal Lobotomies Sever nerve fibers connecting the frontal lobes with deep brain structures (thalamus & hypothalamus Prefrontal Lobotomies Electroconvulsive Therapy The convulsions caused by the shock may have a positive therapeutic effect Electroconvulsive Therapy Negative side effect is memory loss Maxwell Jones Therapeutic community Daily hospital routine, structured as a therapy to help patients learn to cope with outside world Private living quarters Decision making Involved in planning own treatment Maxwell Jones Group Therapy Occupational Therapy Recreational Therapy Seasonal Affective Disorder (SAD) Light therapy is most commonly used to treat SAD Existential Therapy Rollo May Viktor Frankl Existential Therapy Believe that for most people autonomy and freedom are threatening To acknowledge that you are unique and independent is to acknowledge you are alone May et al: to get in touch with true feelings, must accept responsibility for lives Existential Therapy Frankl: feelings of emptiness and boredom are primary source of emotional problems Therapist should help open client’s eyes to possibilities in life and guide him/her toward challenges “Why don’t you commit suicide?” Gestalt Therapy Emphasizes relationship between patient and therapist in here and now If a patient will not respond to the therapist’s questions, the therapist will tell the patient that he is angry and frustrated at the lack of response by the patient. Sets an example for patient to express feelings Significant risk Gestalt Therapy Based on the belief that many people are so concerned with obtaining approval that they become strangers to themselves Transactional Analysis Eric Berne Basis: people function from one of 3 perspectives called ego states Ego states: represent ways people organize thoughts, feelings, and actions Transactional Analysis Child ego state Act like a child Parent ego state Act, think, feel like parent, close friends or teachers Adult ego state Thoughts, feelings, behaviors rationally related to experiences of the present Transactional Analysis Reactions in the adult ego state allow people to deal effectively and responsibly with their daily problems Goal of transactional analysis: help people to identify maladaptive transactions or strategies for living (usually from parent or child ego state) and also to help develop more effective adult ego state responses