Chapter 11: Intervention Overview Flashcards
What is short-term psychodynamic psychotherapy? (STPPs)
treatment approach that emphasizes bringing to awareness unconscious processes, especially as they are expressed in interpersonal relationships and helping client understand and alter these processes
What are the four techniques used in short-term psychodynamic psychotherapy to alter maladaptive patterns?
- reflection (paraphrasing client’s statements or commenting on emotional states in order to enhance their awareness of current experiences
- classification (asking clients to attend more closely to some aspects of their experience in order to see connections or patterns
- interpretation (commenting on a problem or experience and relating it to the use of defence mechanisms or underlying core conflictual themes
- confrontation (challenging clients to recognize that defence mechanisms are interfering with their optimal functioning or that core conflictual themes are responsible for aspects of their experience)
what is transference? and counter transference?
in STPPs it is the unconscious application of expectations and emotional experiences based on important early relationships, to subsequent interpersonal relationships (such as the one with the client towards the therapist)
counter transference is the therapist’s emotional response to the client… it is a good representation of how others react and think of the client in the real world
What are two types of brief psychodynamic therapies?
Supportive-expressive therapy by Lester Luborsky and Hans Strupp’s time-limited dynamic therapy
What is Interpersonal psychotherapy (IPT) for depression?
focuses on changing interpersonal problems that are related to the onset, maintenance and relapse of depressive symptoms
focuses on exploring client’s interactions with others and looks at ROLE DISPUTES which are partially defined by others
it is a brief therapy
its first phase involves assessment of symptoms of depression and patient’s relationships and it is followed by a diagnosis
what is the main difference between IPT and STPP?
They both address the aspects of interpersonal functioning but an important difference is that IPT is designed to alter relational functioning but STPP uses information about relationships to alter intrapsychic variables (focused on self-exploration rather than relationships with others)
What are the three main therapies in Process-experiential therapy?
client centered therapy (Rogers)
Gestalt Therapy
Existential Therapy
What is cognitive-behavioural therapy?
it is a treatment approach that emphasizes the role of thoughts and behaviour in psychological problems and therefore, focuses on altering beliefs, expectations and behaviours in order to improve the client’s functioning
What are 5 elements that Robert Elliot and Leslie Greenberg proposed that PE (process-experiential) treatment should include?
- increasing client’s awareness of emotion
- encouraging the client to express emotion
- enhancing the client’s emotion regulation abilities
- aiding the client to reflect on emotions
- helping the client transform maladaptive emotions into adaptive emotions
What was Albert Bandura’s contribution to cognitive-behavioural therapy?
finding that learning can take place through observation and imitation and laid the foundation for approaches that emphasize the importance of cognitions in mediating behavioural processes
what is self-efficacy?
refers to a person’s sense of competence to learn and perform new tasks
and is found to be the best predictor of behaviour such as approaching a phobic stimulus or attempting a new behaviour
What are 4 key elements of problem solving in CBT?
- defining and formulating the problem
- generating alternatives to deal with this problem
- deciding on the best solution to implement
- implementing and evaluating the solution
What are two reasons why overall impact of routine psychotherapy is weak?
- most patients attend too few sessions (averaging about 2 or 3)
- Some therapist do not consider providing evidence-based therapy
What are two group approaches based on theoretical models?
- process group approaches: Designed to capitalize on dynamics of the group
- Structured group approaches: extensions of treatments that are also offered in individual format
What are three mechanisms of change offered by Group Therapy?
- universality: referring tot he experience of recognizing that one is not alone in facing a particular experience and that others share the same challenges and reactions
- support: both emotional and instrumental may be provided in group format not only by the therapist but by others in the group as well
- modelling: client may learn new ways of coping by observing the efforts of another person