Chapter 17: Treatment of Psychological Disorders Flashcards
Counseling and Clinical psychologists
typically hold a Ph.D. or Psy.D.
Psychiatrists
…medical doctors who specialize in psychotherapy and biomedical treatments
-Therapist, counselor, psychotherapist, hypnotist are NOT protected terms
APA Membership
-29% eclectic (combined), 21% psychodynamic, 16% behavioural, 13% cognitive, 12% humanistic, 9% other
Psychoanalysis
-Goal is to help clients achieve insight (conscious awareness of psychodynamics that underlie their problems)
Free Association
…procedure of verbalizing all thoughts that enter consciousness without censorship
- Freud sat out of sight from patient so thought processes would be determined by internal factors
- Dream interpretation through free association of dream elements
Resistance
defensive maneuvers that hinder the process of therapy
Transference
…psychoanalytic phenomenon in which a client responds irrationally to the analyst as if he were an important person from the client’s past who plays an important role in the client’s dynamics
- Positive transference occurs when a client transfers intense affection, dependency, or love to the analyst
- Negative transference occurs when a client transfers expressions of anger, hatred, or disappointment to the analyst
Interpretation
-any statement by the therapist intended to provide the client with insight into their behaviour or dynamics
Brief Psychodynamic Therapies
- Clients seen a few times a week, rather than daily
- Focus on current life situations, rather than on past childhood experiences
Interpersonal Therapy
-form of brief therapy that focuses on the client’s interpersonal problems and seeks to develop new interpersonal skills
Client-Centered Therapy
-Most important part of therapy is relationship that develops between client and therapist
Unconditional Positive Regard
-therapists show clients that they genuinely care about them and accept them, without judgment or evaluation
Empathy
…willingness and ability to view the world through the client’s eyes
- Therapist communicates understanding by reflecting back to client what they are communicating
- Therapist cannot fake it, because client will realize this
Genuineness
…therapist must honestly express his or her feelings, whether positive or negative
-Non-directive approach (only person who can cure the client is client themselves)
Gestalt Therapy
- Term “gestalt” refers to perceptual principles through which people actively organize stimulus elements into meaningful “whole” patterns
- Goals of therapy is to bring background figures into immediate awareness so that client can be “whole” again
- Empty-chair technique involves client carrying on a conversation with his mother, where he alternately plays his mother and himself
Ellis’ Rational-Emotive Therapy
- Activating event: triggers the emotion
- Belief system: underlies way in which a person appraises the activating event
- Consequences: emotional and behavioural consequences of the appraisal
- Disputing: challenging an erroneous belief system
- People are accustomed to viewing emotions (consequences) as being caused directly by activating events
- Emotions are actually caused by belief system, which must be countered and altered
Beck’s Cognitive Therapy
-Goal is to point out errors of thinking and logic that underlie emotional disturbances and to reprogram client’s automatic negative thought patterns
Self-instructional Training
cognitive coping approach of giving adaptive self-instructions to oneself at crucial phases of the coping process
Classical Conditioning Treatments
- Most direct way to reduce a phobia is through process of classical extinction of anxiety response
- Requires exposure to feared CS in absence of UCS while using response prevention (prevention of escape or avoidance responses during exposure so that extinction can occur)
- Client may be exposed to real-life stimuli (flooding) or may be asked to imagine scenes involving the stimuli (implosion)
Systematic Desensitization
…attempt to eliminate anxiety using counterconditioning, in which a new response that is incompatible with anxiety is conditioned to the anxiety-arousing CS
- Client must construct a stimulus hierarchy (a series of anxiety-arousing stimuli that are ranked in terms of amount of anxiety they evoke)
- Client must relax, and then focus on first level of hierarchy, then next, until finished
- Client can’t experience anxiety if relaxed strongly enough
- Relaxation replaces anxiety as the CR
In Vivo Desensitization
exposure to a hierarchy of real life situations
Aversion Therapy
…therapist pairs a stimulus that is attractive to a person (and that stimulates deviant or self-defeating behaviour – the CS) with a noxious UCS in an attempt to condition an aversion to the CS
-Example: to treat alcoholics, injecting the client with a drug that causes nausea upon consumption of alcohol
Behaviour Modification
treatment techniques that involve the application of operant conditioning procedures in an attempt to increase or decrease a specific behaviour