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VA Training in Evidence-Based Psychotherapies VAPTC EBP Presentation 1 Background • In recent years, health care policy has incorporated evidencebased practice as a central tenet of health care delivery (Institute of Medicine, 2001) • The VA developed a Mental Health Strategic Plan in response to the President’s New Freedom Commission on Mental Health report (2004) • The Mental Health Strategic Plan calls for the implementation of EBPs at every VAMC in the country VAPTC EBP Presentation 2 Goals of VA Training in EBPs • To train VA staff from multiple disciplines in evidence-based psychotherapies • To augment psychotherapies already being offered in VA medical centers VAPTC EBP Presentation 3 VA Dissemination and Training in EBPs • • • • • • • Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) for Depression Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) for Depression Cognitive Processing Therapy (CPT) for PTSD Prolonged Exposure (PE) for PTSD Social Skills Training (SST) for severe mental illness (SMI) Integrative Behavioral Couple Therapy (IBCT) Family Psychoeducation (FPE) – Behavioral Family Therapy (BFT) – Multi-Family Group Therapy (MFGT) VAPTC EBP Presentation 4 EBP Presentations for Interns and Postdoctoral Fellows • VA EBP rollout training has been focused on staff • VA Psychology Training Council (VAPTC) developed a workgroup in 2009 to focus on developing EBP didactics for interns and postdoctoral fellows VAPTC EBP Presentation 5 Goals of these EBP Presentations • To provide a basic working knowledge of each of the rollout EBPs • To provide the foundation for trainees to seek out further training and supervision in the EBPs they intend to implement VAPTC EBP Presentation 6 Limitations • This presentation will not provide equivalent training to the EBP rollouts • This presentation will not provide the skills to implement the treatment without further training and supervision VAPTC EBP Presentation 7 CPT slides are adapted from a presentation by Kathleen M. Chard, Ph.D. COGNITIVE PROCESSING THERAPY (CPT) IS… a short-term evidence-based treatment for PTSD a specific protocol that is a form of cognitive behavioral treatment predominantly cognitive and may or may not include a written account a treatment that can be conducted in groups or individually 9 FORMATS FOR CPT CPT (includes written trauma account) CPT-C • Group • Individual • Combination • Individual • Group (No written account) 10 CPT IN THE VA CPT is recovery focused • Underlying expectation is that veterans can & will recover versus be permanently disabled • CPT teaches people how to be their own therapist when future problems arise • CPT is changing the expectancies of veterans & staff Regarding contact hours/year, 12 weekly appointments is = seeing veterans monthly for a year 11 A Focus on Cognitive Theory of PTSD Throughout their lives, people are taking in information through all of their senses. We work to organize all of that information (words, categories, schemas, etc.) in an attempt to understand, predict and control. Most people are taught the “just world belief” (good behavior is rewarded and mistakes/bad behavior is punished) by parents, teachers, religions, culture. In the face of trauma, we often revert back to the just world belief. A Focus on Cognitive Theory of PTSD These beliefs work as long as there is no contradictory information. The experience of trauma is so significant that you can’t ignore it. Intrusive symptoms occur as a result of the inability to integrate the information effectively . 13 A Focus on Cognitive Theory of PTSD Once the trauma is over, it is a memory. People have three possibilities when processing the trauma: • The information matches and is incorporated (assimilation). • They change too much and interpret everything in light of this new information (over-accommodation). • They change their view of the world/themselves to incorporate the new information in a balanced, reality-based way (accommodation). 14 SOCIAL COGNITIVE THEORY OF PTSD Beliefs ≈ Trauma 15 ASSIMILATION - PRE-EXISTING POSITIVE BELIEFS It is a just world Beliefs People can be trusted ≈ STUCK I am in control I must have done something bad to deserve this Trauma It is my fault I could have prevented this 16 ASSIMILATION - PRE-EXISTING NEGATIVE BELIEFS I am a bad person People cannot be trusted Beliefs ≈ STUCK I have no control over anything I deserved it Trauma I knew I shouldn’t have trusted him/her See, I have no control 17 OVER-ACCOMMODATION I have no control at all Beliefs I am in control ≈ I was unsafe Trauma STUCK The world is The world is safe completely unsafe I was powerless 18 ACCOMMODATION Good Bad things happen to people do bad things good people A bad thing happened to me RECOVERY Beliefs Trauma I have power over I can take steps to many things, but protect myself, not all things but no one is 100% safe I was unsafe I was powerless 19 IDENTIFYING STUCK POINTS Assimilation Over-accommodation (about the past/trauma) (about present and future) Undoing, (“if only, should have”) Conclusions, implications of trauma guilt or blame about trauma (“never, always, no one”, all re: 5 themes) 20 Stuck points are usually: 21 So what about emotions? There are two types of emotions Natural emotions emanate directly from the event and are hard-wired • fight-flight response→fear-anger • losses→sadness • disgust→withdrawal Manufactured emotions are produced by thoughts and beliefs • Self-blame thoughts→guilt • Other-blame thoughts→anger or rage The therapist needs to determine which kind of emotion it is If natural, clients need to feel and let it run its course. Natural emotions dissipate quickly. If manufactured, clients need to change their thinking. So how does CPT work? Challenging avoidance Dissipation of natural emotions Change in thinking about meaning of event changes manufactured emotions instantly (no habituation required) Clients learn to not over-generalize their thinking about a single bad event to all people or to themselves (just because an event has bad consequences, it doesn’t have to have big implications) RESEARCH ON CPT There have been four randomized clinical trials of CPT and several effectiveness studies. See the manual for the exact references. Randomized Clinical Trials Rape victims (Resick et al., 2002, JCCP) Child sexual abuse (Chard, 2005, JCCP) Veterans (Monson et al., 2006, JCCP) Rape and assault (Resick et al., 2008, JCCP) 24 CAPS SEVERITY PRE- AND POST-TREATMENT (TREATMENT COMPLETERS) 25 BDI SEVERITY PRE- AND POST-TREATMENT (TREATMENT COMPLETERS) 26 CHARD (2007): EFFECTIVENESS OF CPT IN VA RESIDENTIAL PROGRAM • 7-week residential program • CPT conducted twice a week in individual and group treatment • 23 other hours of psych. programming • Pre-post data on 154 residents, 122 men and 32 women admitted as cohorts of 12 • Next slides compare this program with the RCT with veterans by Monson et al. (2006) Chard, Unpublished data 27 CINCINNATI RESIDENTIAL PROGRAM * ** N= 140 77 142 61 139 73 PCL (MADISON) AND CAPS (CINCINNATI) ACROSS ERAS Madison Cincinnati Some other findings of note… 1. Long-term follow-up of a clinical trial comparing CPT and PE. Patricia A. Resick, Lauren Williams Robert Orazem and Cassidy Gutner ISTSS & ABCT, Nov., 2005 LONG TERM FOLLOW-UPS • Follow-up conducted at five+ years posttreatment (M= 6 yrs, range 5-10) • 171 women were in the intent-to-treat sample • We did not locate 25 and 3 were deceased • Of the 143 we located: 17 refused to participate (12%) 2 were located but were not appropriate • We conducted at least the diagnostic interviews on 124 and have complete assessments on 119 • 88% participation rate 31 CPT AND PE “CROSS-SECTIONAL” (INTENT-TO-TREAT) CPT, N= 83 PE, N= 88 55 55 50 51 41 39 63 64 32 CPT & PE ITT ON PTSD DIAGNOSIS AT PRE-TREATMENT AND LONG TERM 33 COGNITIVE PROCESSING THERAPY SESSION BY SESSION Cognitive Processing Therapy Veteran/Military Version Resick, P. A., Monson, C. M., & Chard, K. M. (2008) Produced by VA Office of Mental Health, VA National Center for PTSD/ VA Boston Healthcare System and Cincinnati VA Medical Center CPT VERSUS CPT-C? FACTORS THAT INFLUENCE THE CHOICE – Patient may have a personal preference – More available research – Account writing and sharing full details might be therapeutic – Patient is wiling to write an account – Patient states he has little or no memory of the event due to avoidance (writing acct may help recover the details) – Time is not a factor – Therapist believes that the patient needs to express avoided emotions. – Patient may have a personal preference – Patient really has no recollection of the event – Patient refuses to write account – Impending redeployment/not enough time for full protocol – Therapist discomfort with written account component – Less overall time available, want more time to develop cognitive skills – Conceptualization of case warrants more cognitive restructuring – Conducting group therapy PROGRESSION THROUGH WORKSHEETS Analyze, Information gathering, feelings Impact statement ABC sheets Challenge Challenging questions Problematic patterns Change (CBW) Challenging Beliefs Worksheet Themes Written Account 36 PHASE 1. PRE-TREATMENT ASSESSMENT AND PRE-TREATMENT ISSUES 37 PRE-TREATMENT ISSUES Please assess patients formally to determine whether they have PTSD, and if needed, other comorbid conditions Describe the therapy you are offering, how it might differ from other former treatment Therapist contract 38 OTHER PRE-TREATMENT ISSUES: CPT FOR WHOM AND WHEN Substance abuse/dependence Self-harm/suicidality/homicidality Dissociation Literacy Other comorbidity Medications and other treatments How early can you start? • Risk to re-exposure (redeployment) • Sufficient skills needed to start? 39 PRETREATMENT ISSUES- RATIONALE AND BUY-IN THERAPIST TASKS Motivational interviewing techniques may be helpful (advantages and disadvantages of avoidance) Patient needs to believe that improvement is possible for him/her Patient needs to believe that he/she has the ability to tolerate therapy and has sufficient skills Desire to approach needs to be stronger than desire to avoid 40 RECOMMENDED ASSESSMENT MEASURES CAPS interview for diagnosis, frequency and severity (pre and post-treatment) Self-report scales (weekly) • PTSD Checklist (PCL) • Beck Depression Inventory or other depression checklist www.ncptsd.va.gov (vaww.ptsd.va.gov) 41 STRUCTURING SESSIONS Brief update (mood and PTSD symptoms) • Objective symptom measures • Complete practice assignment review (“Let’s go over your worksheets” rather than “How was your week?”) Review of practice assignment • Reviewing practice reinforces completion • Content is the “meat” of the session • Use Socratic questioning and model challenging thoughts • Use relevant forms regardless of the content 42 STRUCTURING SESSIONS (CONT.) Setting new practice assignment • Review rationale • Explain the concept and new assignment • Start assignment in session • Problem-solve any barriers to assignment completion 43 44 SESSION 1. SYMPTOMS AND RATIONALE 1. Describe symptoms of PTSD (handout) 2. PTSD as a disorder of non-recovery 3. Fight-flight-freeze reactions 4. Cognitive theory of PTSD • “Just world” belief • Assimilation versus over-accommodation • Goal of accommodation 45 SESSION 1. SYMPTOMS AND RATIONALE 5. Types of emotions • Natural emotions result directly from eventthey are the hardwired response (goal is to feel them and let them run their course) • Manufactured emotions are based on interpretations of the event (goal is to change the thought, which changes the emotion) 6. Choosing index traumatic event 46 SESSION 1. SYMPTOMS AND RATIONALE 7. Stuck points • Handout • Log 8. Anticipating avoidance and increasing practice compliance 9. Overview of treatment 47 SESSION 2. IMPACT STATEMENT Patient reads Impact Statement Discuss implications of statement Review material from first session Introduce eventsthoughtsfeelings relationship 48 A-B-C Sheet Date: ___________ patient #: ______ ACTIVATING EVENT A “Something happens” BELIEF B “ I tell myself something” CONSEQUENCE C “I feel something” Is it reasonable to tell yourself “B” above? _____________________ _________________________________________________________ What can you tell yourself on such occasions in the future? ________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________________________ 49 SESSION 3. EVENTS, THOUGHTS & EMOTIONS Review A-B-C Worksheets. Using Socratic questions, help patient generate alternative thoughts and consequent feelings. Gently begin to challenge undoing or self-blame statements. 50 SESSION 3. SOCRATIC DIALOGUE At this point in therapy we do not strongly challenge maladaptive statements. More important to help clarify thoughts and feelings. Work gently with assimilation (self-blame & undoing). 51 PHASE 3. PROCESSING THE TRAUMA 52 SESSION 4. FIRST ACCOUNT Patient reads account aloud to therapist. Patient and therapist discuss reactions to writing it/reading it. First work on emotions. Sit with them, name them. Therapist gently challenges self-blame and hindsight bias. Be curious. 53 SESSION 5. SECOND ACCOUNT Patient reads second account of incident Patient and therapist continue to process any remaining selfblame or undoing Therapist introduces Challenging Questions Worksheet 54 Challenging Questions Worksheet Below are a list of questions to be used in helping you challenge your maladaptive or problematic beliefs. Not all questions will be appropriate for the belief you choose to challenge. Answer as many questions as you can for the belief you have chosen to challenge below. Belief:_________________________________________ 1. What is the evidence for and against this idea? 2. Is your belief a habit or based on facts? 3. Are your interpretations of the situation too far removed from reality to be accurate? 4. Are you thinking in all-or-none terms? 55 Challenging Questions Continued 5. Are you using words or phrases that are extreme or exaggerated? (i.e., always, forever, never, need, should, must, can’t and every time) 6. Are you taking selected examples out of context and only focusing on one aspect of the event? 7. Is the source of information reliable? 8. Are you confusing a low probability with a high probability? 9. Are your judgments based on feelings rather than facts? 10. Are you focusing on irrelevant factors? 56 57 SESSION 6. CHALLENGING QUESTIONS Patient and therapist review Challenging Questions Worksheets to question single statements or beliefs Therapist introduces Patterns of Problematic Thinking Sheet to see if there are typical patterns of cognition 58 Patterns of Problematic Thinking Listed below are several types of patterns of problematic thinking that people use in different life situations. These patterns often become automatic, habitual thoughts that cause us to engage in self-defeating behavior. Considering your own stuck points, find examples for each of the patterns. Write in the stuck point under the appropriate pattern and describe how it fits that pattern. Think about how that pattern affects you. 1. Jumping to conclusions when evidence is lacking or even contradictory 2. Exaggerating or minimizing the meaning of an event 59 Patterns of Problematic Thinking 3. Disregarding important aspects of a situation 4. Oversimplifying events or beliefs as good/bad or right/wrong 5. Over-generalizing from a single incident 6. Mind-reading 7. Emotional reasoning 60 SESSION 7. PROBLEMATIC PATTERNS Patient and therapist review Patterns of Problematic Thinking Therapist introduces Challenging Beliefs Worksheets Therapist introduces Safety Module 61 Challenging Beliefs Worksheet A. Situation B. Thought (stuck point) D. Challenging Thoughts E. Problematic patterns F. Alternative Thought Describe the event, thought or belief leading to the unpleasant emotion(s). Write thought(s) related to Column A. Rate belief in each thought below from 0-100% (How much do you believe this thought?) Use Challenging Questions to examine your automatic thoughts from Column B. Is the thought balanced and factual or extreme? Use the Problematic Thinking Patterns sheet to decide if this is one of your problematic patterns of thinking. What else can I say instead of Column B? How else can I interpret the event instead of Column B? Rate belief in alternative thought(s) from 0-100% Evidence? Jumping to conclusions Habit or Fact? Exaggerating or minimizing Interpretations not accurate? All or none? Extreme or exaggerated? Out of context? C. Emotion(s) Specify sad, angry, etc., and rate how strongly you feel each emotion from 0-100% Source unreliable? Low versus high probability? Based on feelings or facts? Disregarding important aspects Oversimplifying Overgeneralizing G. Re-rate how much you now believe the thought in Column B from 0-100% Mind reading Emotional reasoning H. Emotion(s) Now what do you feel? 0-100% Irrelevant factors? 62 63 SESSIONS 8-12 Use the Challenging Beliefs Worksheet throughout the rest of therapy. Each theme can relate to beliefs about self or others. Challenging should help clients move from extreme statements to balanced statement. Use of the full continuum of thoughts and emotions. 64 FORMAT FOR SESSIONS 8-12 Assess symptoms Review module and worksheets and assist as consultant (client takes on a greater role) Focus on individual stuck points as well as the theme for the session Introduce the new theme and module Other specific assignments for sessions 11 & 12 65 NEW ASSIGNMENTS IN ADDITION TO CBW Giving and Receiving Compliments Purposes are to: • Have them interact more with other people and focus their attention outward (giving compliments is a fairly safe interaction) • Listen to what other people say to them without filtering and distorting • Consider other sources of information about themselves • Help dispute stuck points about self 66 67 SESSION 12. INTIMACY AND FINAL IMPACT STATEMENT Patient and therapist review Challenging Beliefs Worksheets on intimacy Patient reads new Impact Statement Patient and therapist review course of therapy and skills learned Patient and therapist identify future goals and issues which still need attention 68 SESSION 12. REVIEW AND GOALS Review course of therapy and skills learned Identify future goals and issues which still need attention 69 CPT Training Program • CPT National Training Program (new requirements as of 2010) – Attend 2- or 3-day workshop • Workshops consist of didactics, video case examples, role play of CPT skills – Participate in CPT Case Consultation • Attend consultation calls for 6 months • Participate in at least 75% of the calls • More may be required depending on training needs – Complete CPT cases according to the model • At least 2 individual (50 min weekly sessions) OR • At least 1 group (90-120 weekly sessions) – Submit case notes to the CPT Program 71 Why is Consultation Important? Attending case consultation and completing the remaining steps to become a “CPT Provider” are required as outlined in the CPT Training Agreement However, there are many other reasons to attend consultation: Consolidates workshop learning Promotes use of critical thinking skills via review of specific case examples and implementation strategies Provides more opportunities to practice Socratic questioning and other CPT skills Builds CPT community – you can meet and learn from other CPT clinicians Most importantly, helps our Veterans by teaching clinicians how to provide the best CPT care possible CRITERIA TO Become a CPT Provider Be a licensed and credentialed VA clinician Attend an approved CPT workshop Complete a sufficient number of CPT cases to become a CPT provider: 2 individual CPT cases or 1 CPT group following the CPT protocol as evidenced by case notes (two different patients) Attend consultation calls within two weeks of your CPT training (even if you don’t have a patient) to the completion of the last patient/group Criteria to become a CPT provider Active participation in a call is defined as: Discussion of a current patient in CPT, including stuck points and PCL scores, and attending the entire consultation call You will be asked to begin participating in weekly phone case consultation for a minimum of one hour per week for a period of 6 months (you must attend at least 75% of the calls) Please inform consultant if you cannot attend your scheduled CPT call Your application will then be reviewed to assess understanding and delivery of CPT Your paired consultant will be the person reviewing your application packet Criteria to become a CPT provider Apply for Provider status by completing the CPT Provider application located on the SharePoint website (address listed below): https://vaww.portal.va.gov/sites/cpt_community/default.aspx Fax all data to CPT staff at required time frames (More information to follow)