Chapter 10: cognitive work: working with core beliefs and schemas Flashcards
consider therapy related to core beliefs for the following clients
- clients whose underlying beliefs create risk for relapse
- clients whose immediate symptoms or problems have been markedly reduced
- clients who are able to engage in more abstract discussions
- clients who are not at risk of current psychotic disorder
- clients who have the resources and interest to remain in longer-term treatment
definition schemas
schema concept refers to cognitive structures of organised prior knowledge, abstracted from experience with specific instances; schemas guide the processing of new information and the retrieval of stored information
discovering beliefs and schemas: strategies (10)
- searching for themes
- recurrent experience
- the downward arrow
- sharing the case conceptualisation
- Behavioral experiments
- hypothetical situations
- historical perspective
- emotional prime
- reading materials
- formal assessment
discovering beliefs and schemas: strategies: searching for themes
- describe what you have observed in therapy and see whether client agrees to that pattern
- have the client provide a name or label for this pattern
discovering beliefs and schemas: strategies: recurrent experience
- if client expresses the idea that the current experience reminds him or her of an earlier experience in life (my boss treats me the same way my father used to)
- good indicator that client has a schema triggered or activated by this memory
discovering beliefs and schemas: strategies: downward arrow
- begins with situation specific automatic thought, then examine inferences and drill down all the way to central beliefs or schemas
discovering beliefs and schemas: strategies: behavioural experiments
- e.g. client might hypothesise that she has a general belief that others will reject her if she is open and honest
- such an assumption is generally based on deeper belief about being socially undesirable
- to test out this prediction and to test out whether assumption becomes activated: set up experiment in which she is purposely more self-disclosing than typically
- key: See whether the situation provokes the expected automatic thoughts
discovering beliefs and schemas: strategies: hypothetical situations
- construct hypothetical event and see how client would react
- useful when triggers are unusual or difficult to set up in behavioural experiment
- may not reflect actual experience in real life situations
discovering beliefs and schemas: strategies: historical base
- ask about historical base
- core beliefs and schemas typically develop when they serve a useful purpose, to make sense of the world, to adapt to a certain situation
- if you can identify the approx. period in life when schema developed and understand why it was adaptive at that time, it might provide further evidence that you have accurately identified an early schema
discovering beliefs and schemas: strategies: emotional prime
- employ techniques to trigger or activate schemas
- e.g., encourage client to recall sad time and feel that experience –> see if it activates beliefs that were present in the past
discovering beliefs and schemas: strategies: formal assessment
- use of questionnaires, e.g. Young Schema Questionnaire
- ideally scales confirm your clinical case conceptualisation and serve as independent validation
changing schemas: methods (2)
- evidence-based methods
2. logical change methods
changing schemas: evidence-based methods: strategies (10)
- differentiating schema elements
- recognizing continua
- positive data log
- evidence for the old and new schemas
- what would it take to change the beliefs?
- therapy role plays
- therapy “confrontation”
- behavioural experiments
- acting as if
- confronting the past
changing schemas: evidence-based methods: strategies: differentiating schema elements
- rather than trying to modify the overall schema of being mistrusting for example, it may be easier to identify the key behavioural or emotional markers of the schema and move to change these
changing schemas: evidence-based methods: strategies: recognizing continua
- often difficult to find contrary evidence in the face of categorical or absolute beliefs
- discuss likelihood and risk/value of any issue being categorical