Chapter 15- Treatment of Psychological Disorders Flashcards
psychotherapy
an interaction between a therapist and someone suffering from a psychological problem, with the goal of providing support or relief from the problem
eclectic psychotherapy
treatment that draws on techniques from different forms of therapy, depending on the client and the problem
psychodynamic psychotherapies
a general approach to treatment that explored childhood events and encourages individuals to develop insight into their psychological problems
resistance
a reluctance to cooperate with treatment for fear of confronting unpleasant unconscious material
transference
an event that occurs in psychoanalysis when the analyst begins to assume a major significance in the client’s life and the client reacts to the analyst based on unconscious childhood fantasies
interpersonal psychotherapy (IPT)
a form of psychotherapy that focuses on helping clients improve current relationships
behavior therapy
a type of therapy that assumes that disordered behavior is learned and that symptom relief is achieved through changing overt mal-adaptive behaviors into more constructive behaviors
token economy
a form of behavior therapy in which clients are given “Tokens” for desired behaviors which they can later trade for rewards
exposure theory
an approach to treatment that involves confronting an emotion-arousng stimulus directly and repeatedly, ultimately leading to a decrease in the emotional response
systematic desensitization
a procedure in which a client relaxes all the muscles in his or her body while imagining being increasingly frightening situations
cognitive therapy
a form of psychopathy that involved helping a client identity and corrects any distorted thinking about self, others, or the world
cognitive restructuring
a therapeutic approach that teaches clients to question the automatic beliefs, assumptions, and predictions that often lead to negative emotions and to replace negative thinking with more realistic and positive beliefs
mindfulness meditation
a form of cognitive therapy that teaches an individual to be fully present in each moment. to be aware of his or her thoughts and sensations and to detect symptoms before they become a problem
cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT)
a blend of cognitive and behavioral therapeutic strategies
person-centered therapy
an approach to therapy that assumes all individuals have a tendency toward growth and that this growth can be facilitated by acceptance and genuine reactions from the therapist