Chapter 17 Flashcards

1
Q

Biological therapies

A

Electroconvulsive Therapy
* 1930s: Schizophrenics with seizures - not a good treatment
* Still used to treat severe, non-
responsive MDD - useful for depression, but last option
* Side effects greatly reduced

Psychopharmacology
* It is difficult to understand the
process that is causing the
disorder and then finding an agent
that will modify that process.
- eases symptoms - manages disorders

Antipsychotics
* Developed in the 1950s
* Allowed for deinstitutionalization of
mental patients, especially people with
schizophrenia
Side effects:
* Extrapyramidal effects
* Newer drugs have fewer side
extrapyramidal side effects but are
no more effective

Anxiolytics - not used for anxiety anymore due to high dose of toxins
* Used to alleviate symptoms of anxiety
and muscle tension
* Barbiturates and benzodiazepines
* Problems: Tolerance & Addiction

Antidepressants
* Four major categories
* MAOIs
* TCAs
* SSRIs
* SNRIs
* Not effective immediately
* Can increase suicidal thoughts in
youths
Anxiolytics
* Used to alleviate symptoms of anxiety
and muscle tension
* Barbiturates and benzodiazepines
* Problems: Tolerance & Addiction

Mood Stabilizers
* Typically used to treat bipolar
disorder (BPD)
* Lithium
* Divalproex
* Very narrow window of effectiveness
* Low = not effective
* High = toxic

Stimulants
* Most commonly used to treat
children and adults with ADHD
* Side effects:
* appetite suppression
* sleep disturbance
* mood disturbance
* Headaches
* abdominal discomfort
* fatigue

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2
Q

Therapies
Psychotherapy

A
  • A process in which a professionally trained therapist systematically uses techniques derived from psychological principles to
    relieve another person’s psychological distress or to facilitate growth.
  • In Canada, the title psychotherapist is not licensed or restricted in any fashion.
  • Many forms:
  • individuals, couples, family & group
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3
Q

Therapies Psychodynamic - Freud

A

Techniques:
* Free association - link insights - therapist says one word and they respond with another
* Dream interpretation - understand what was subconscious
* Analysis of resistance - resistance on certain topics
* Analysis of transference - transfer conflict to another person - eg. seeing therapist as a father figure, causes you to act in the same way

Brief Psychodynamic Psychotherapy
* Neo-Freudians modified the techniques.
* Active and flexible
* Short term and 2xs/week
* Goals are concrete
* Conversation
* Empathy
* Current focus

Ego analysis - reliance on defence mechanisms - move away from focus on the ID

Adler’s Individual Psychology
* Focus on striving to overcome personal weakness
* Deeply held mistaken beliefs that lead to maladaptive style of life that protects insight into own imperfections

Interpersonal
Psychodynamic
* Harry Stack Sullivan
* Mental disorders result from maladaptive early parent-
child interactions.
* Emphasis on interactions between the client and his or her social environment

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4
Q

Therapies
Humanistic-Experiential Approaches

A

Client centered therapy - Carl Rogers - don’t focus on diagnosing, rather focus on overcoming maladaptive behaciour

Existential - inspired by Sartre and Kierkegaard - feelings of lack of meaning - support search for meaning, connect with others

Gestalt therapy - Fredrich Perls - emphasised that distortions exist when you make sense of yourself, which is responsible for impairments on personal growth
- empty chair technique - interpersonal conflict - help see situation from different perspective - speak to empty chair - then move - role play conversation

Emotion focused therapy - les greenberg - client has relationship with therapist that is full of empathy - initially introduced for couples therapy

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5
Q

Therapies
Behavioural Approaches

A

Based on operant conditioning treatment - problematic behaviours are learnt and this learning can be reversed with new learning

Contingency management
* Formal contract outlining goals, reinforcements, rewards - behaviour change

Response Shaping
* Shaping behaviour in gradual steps toward a goal - rewards to be successive - little reinforcement along the way

Behavioural Activation
*Identification of natural reinforcers - do things that are new - eg. exercise (natural reinforcers)

  • Relaxation Training
    Practical + accessible relaxation skills
  • Exposure
  • Systematic desensitization - gradual exposure to stimuli that provokes anxiety - could be done in real life or imagination - in order of heriarchy of what stresses you

Assertiveness training
* behavior modeling (ex. Role play)

Dialectical behavior therapy - talk therapy

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6
Q

Therapies
Cognitive Approaches

A

Identifying automatic thoughts using
thought record/journal - identify cognitive biases
* identifying links between
cognitions and emotions

  • Cognitive restructuring involves
    identifying and modifying maladaptive thoughts (general technique) - asking questions to see the inconsistencies you have

Mindfulness practices
* Let go of your thoughts or change the way you engage with your negative thoughts would be ok.

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7
Q

Cognitive Behavioural therapy

A

Situation -> Thoughts about this situation -> Emotions and Behaviours (reaction)

  • Based on the idea that how we think and feel influences our behaviour
  • Techniques: Journaling, cognitive restructuring, play the script until the end, examining the evidence
  • you become your own therapist
  • Many takes on CBT:
  • Albert Bandura: self-efficacy - more social mix - thinking about interactions with the social world and how we learn to behave based on different models around us and how we view ourself
  • Albert Ellis: rational-emotive therapy
  • Aaron Beck: cognitive therapy
  • Maladaptive patterns of thinking → distress
  • helps you be aware of the present
  • thoughts are just thoughts - not reality
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8
Q

Integrative Approaches

A
  • What makes a therapy effective? (Frank, 1961)
    1. Hope (in client)
    2. Alternative explanation for the problem
    3. Expectations of change (think/feel/act in a different way)
  • Evidence Based Therapy Relationships
  • Therapeutic alliance/cohesion in group therapy
  • Therapist empathy
  • Monitoring (accountability)
  • Consensus and collaboration (need to consent to the treatment plan)
  • One-third of therapists identify with a certain school of therapy but claim to have integrated aspects of diverse approaches.
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9
Q

Treatment Modalities

A

Individual Therapy
* Individual therapy remains the
most common modality.
* Significant others may be invited
to participate.
* Practiced with adults,
adolescents, and children.

Couples Therapy
* The goal is to enhance each partner’s
satisfaction with the relationship.
* Useful for problems that once were
considered individual issues.

Family Therapy
* Originated in social work and the
child guidance movement
* Family as solution to the problem
* Identify interactions between
family members that may
inadvertently contribute to
problems

Group Therapy
* Cost effective
* Post WW II initiative
* Group context offers feedback
* Universality → can reduce feelings
of stigma

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10
Q

Treatment of Anxiety Disorders

A

Specific phobias
Winning combo:
- Cognitive restructuring + Exposure
Feeling of anxiety is not life threatening

Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder
Winning combo:
- Exposure + response prevention
& cognitive restructuring

What fuels the anxiety
- cognitive - attention shift to perceived dangers - activation of threat relevant memories - thought patterns fuel the anxiety
- behavioural - motivation to escape or avoid the perceived threat, behavioural rituals to minimise danger
- physiological - increased heart rate, muscle tension, respiration sweating, etc - physical signs of anxiety

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11
Q

Treatment of Depression

A

CBT & IPT particularly effective
Key techniques from CBT
* Behavioral activation (ex. activity scheduling)
* Behavioural experiments

Common cognitive distorsions
* Overgeneralization (broad conclusions)
* All or nothing thinking (extreme)
* Jumping to conclusions (evidence?)
* Magnification (importance)

Medication
* No effect (medication vs placebo) for mild and moderate cases
* Most helpful for severe depression
* Higher risk of relapse with medication

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12
Q

Treatment for Unipolar Depression
Cognitive-Behaviour Therapy

A
  • Emotional reactions to a
    situation are determined,
    at least in part, by one’s
    thoughts about the
    situation.
  • The person’s
    psychological distress
    could be alleviated by
    identifying and modifying
    the maladaptive patterns
    of thinking that are at the
    root of distress
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13
Q

Treatment for Unipolar Depression
Interpersonal psychotherapy (IPT)

A
  • IPT focuses on the disruptions
    that occur in the person’s
    interpersonal world as a result
    of depression

Interpersonal model:
* Negative feedback seeking
* Excessive reassurance
seeking
* Stress generation
hypothesis

Life Stress Perspective
* Stressful life events can trigger a
downward spiral into depression
* “Diatheses” (vulnerability)

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14
Q

Treatments for
Schizophrenia

A
  • Early interventions during
    the prodromal phase - high risk for developing schizophrenia - negative symptoms and functioning deficits are present
  • medication, CBT, cognitive
    remediation, and social skills
    training
  • Effective, but… deficits in
    cognition, functioning and
    quality of life appear to persist
  • Medication
  • Antipsychotic medications
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15
Q

Treatment for Schizophrenia
CBT

A
  • The way that individuals interpret their experiences plays an important role in the maintenance of symptoms.
  • Components:
  • Psychoeducation, belief modification and fostering of adaptive coping strategies.
  • Therapy involves a number of stages.
  • Establish a strong therapeutic alliance – trust and collaboration are important.
  • Normalize symptoms
  • Diaries to keep track of their symptoms as well as their emotional and behavioural
    reactions to them (e.g., voices).
  • The therapist works with the client to arrive at alternative interpretations of these
    experiences.
  • Increase rewarding experiences.
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16
Q

Treatment for Personality Disorders
Three general approaches

A
  • when there is distress - they want something to change - antisocial personality disorder
  • object relations therapy - psychodynamic - correcting flaws - aknowledging and focusing on new relationships
  • cognitive-behavioural therapy - challenging underlying beliefs - aknowledging strengths
  • antidepressants
  • antipsychotic
    anticonvulsant - helps with impulsiveness
17
Q

Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT)
Marsha Linehan

A
  • based on cognitive behavioural principles

Effective treatment for Borderline
Personality Disorder
- What is it?
- Mindfulness skills - consultation - unstable sense of self - mood swings
- Observing (environment, self,
body)
- Describing
- Participating (letting go, go with
the flow)
- Non judgmental approach
- Here & now
- Being effective (not being right)

Examples of strategies:
Find the factors making you
vulnerable to your emotions
today

Prompting event
- Problem solving skills?
- Check the facts (to counter
misinterpretations)