Clinical Psychology - Flash Cards
Eysenck
Eysenck was a British psychologist known for his factor analysis of personality traits, contributions to behavior therapy, and 1952 review of psychotherapy outcome studies in which he found that 72% of untreated neurotic individuals improved without therapy, while 66% of patients receiving eclectic psychotherapy and 44% receiving psychoanalytic psychotherapy showed a substantial decrease in symptoms. Based on these findings, Eysenck concluded that any apparent benefit of therapy is due to spontaneous remission.
Group Therapy (Formative Stages, Cohesiveness, Premature Termination)
According to Yalom, therapy groups typically pass through three formative stages - (1) ORIENTATION, participation, search for meaning, and dependency; (2) CONFLICT, dominance, and rebellion; and (3) development of COHESIVENESS. Yalom describes cohesiveness as the most important curative factor provided by group therapy and the group therapy analog for the therapist-client relationship in individual therapy. He proposes that prescreening of potential group members and post-selection preparation can reduce premature termination from group therapy and enhance therapy outcomes.
Strategic Family Therapy (Paradoxical Interventions)
Haley’s strategic family therapy focuses on transactional patterns and views symptoms as interpersonal events that serve to control relationships. Therapy focuses on SYMPTOM RELIEF (rather than insight); and involves the use of specific strategies, especially paradoxical interventions (e.g., ordeals, prescribing the symptom, reframing) that are designed to alter the behavior of family members by helping them see a symptom in an alternative way or recognize they have control over their behaviors or by using their resistance in a constructive way.
Efficacy Vs. Effectiveness Research
An ongoing debate on psychotherapy outcome research is over the best way to evaluate the effects of psychotherapy. On one side of the argument are experts who support efficacy studies (clinical trials); on the other are those who prefer effectiveness studies, which are correlational or quasi-experimental in nature.
Health Belief Model
The health belief model proposes that health behaviors are influenced by (1) the person’s readiness to take a particular action, which is related to his/her perceived susceptibility to the illness and perceived severity of its consequences; (2) the person’s evaluation of the benefits and costs of making a particular response; and (3) the internal and external “cues to action” that trigger the response.
Freudian Psychoanalysis
According to Freud, when the ego is unable to ward off danger (anxiety) through rational, realistic means, it may resort to one of its defense mechanisms (e.g., repression, reaction formation) which share two characteristics: They operate on an unconscious level and they serve to deny or distort reality. In psychoanalysis, the analysis of free associations, dreams, resistances, and transferences consists of a combination of CONFRONTATION, CLARIFICATION, INTERPRETATION, and WORKING THROUGH.
Prevention (Primary, Secondary, Tertiary)
Methods of prevention are classified as primary, secondary, or tertiary: Primary preventions make an intervention available to all members of a target group or population in order to keep them from developing a disorder. Secondary preventions identify at-risk individuals who are showing early signs of a disorder and offer them appropriate interventions. Tertiary preventions are designed to reduce the duration and consequences of an illness that has already occurred.
Worldview (Sue)
As defined by Sue (1978), a person’s worldview is affected by his/her cultural background and is determined by two factors - LOCUS OF CONTROL and LOCUS OF RESPONSIBILITY. Differences in worldview can affect the therapeutic process. For example, White middle-class therapists typically have an internal locus of control and internal locus of responsibility (IC-IR) and are likely to have problems working with an African American client with an internal locus of control and external locus of responsibility (IC-ER) who may challenge the therapist’s authority and trustworthiness and be reluctant to self-disclose.
Double-Bind Communication
As originally defined by Bateson, Jackson, Haley, and Weakland (1956), double-bind communication is an etiological factor for SCHIZOPHRENIA and involves conflicting negative injunctions - e.g., “do that and you’ll be punished” and “don’t do that and you’ll be punished” - with one injunction often being expressed verbally and the other nonverbally. In addition, the recipient of the contradictory injunctions is not allowed to comment on them or seek help from someone else.
General Systems Theory
General systems theory defines a system as an entity that is maintained by the mutual interactions of its components and assumes that the actions of interacting components are best understood by studying them in their context. Consistent with general systems theory, family therapists view the family as primarily an open system that continuously receives input from and discharges output to the environment and is adaptable to change. The influence of general systems theory on family therapy is evident in the concept of HOMEOSTASIS, which is the tendency for a family to act in ways that maintain the family’s equilibrium or status quo.
Structural Family Therapy (Boundaries, Rigid Triads, Joining)
Minuchin’s structural family therapy emphasizes altering the family’s structure in order to change the behavior patterns of family members. Boundaries (rules that determine the amount of contact that is allowed between family members) are one element of the family structure: When boundaries are overly rigid, family members are disengaged and when they are too diffuse or permeable, family members are enmeshed. Minuchin distinguished between three chronic boundary problems, or rigid triads: detouring, stable coalition, and triangulation.
(Boundaries, Rigid Triads, Joining)
Motivational Interviewing (OARS)
Motivational interviewing was developed specifically for clients who are ambivalent about changing their behavior and combines the transtheoretical (stages of change) model with client-centered therapy and the concept of self-efficacy. The specific techniques of motivational interviewing are OPEN-ENDED QUESTIONS, AFFIRMATIONS, REFLECTIVE LISTENING, and SUMMARIES (OARS).
Personal Construct Therapy
George Kelly’s personal construct therapy focuses on how the client experiences the world. It assumes that a person’s psychological processes are determined by the way he or she “construes” (perceives, interprets, and predicts) events, with construing involving the use of personal constructs, which are BIPOLAR DIMENSIONS OF MEANING (e.g., happy/sad, competent/incompetent) that begin to develop in infancy and may operate on an unconscious or conscious level. The goal of therapy is to help the client identify and revise or replace maladaptive personal constructs so that the client is better able to “make sense” of his/her experiences.
Separation-Individuation (Mahler)
Mahler’s version of object relations theory focuses on the processes by which an infant assumes his/her own physical and psychological identity, and her model of early development involves several phases. The development of object relations occurs during the separation-individuation phase, which begins at four to five months of age. According to Mahler, adult psychopathology can be traced to problems that occurred during separation-individuation.
Gestalt Therapy (Boundary Disturbance, Transference, Awareness)
Gestalt therapy views “awareness” (a full understanding of one’s thoughts, feelings, and actions in the here-and-now) as the primary curative factor and defines neurosis as a “growth disorder” that is often attributable to a boundary disturbance (e.g., introjection) that leads to an abandonment of the self for the self image. Gestaltians regard a client’s transference to be counterproductive and respond to it by helping the client recognize the difference between his/her “transference fantasy” and reality.
Adler’s Individual Psychology
Adler’s personality theory and approach to therapy stress the unity of the individual and the belief that behavior is purposeful and goal-directed. Key concepts are inferiority feelings, striving for superiority, and style of life (which unifies the various aspects of an individual’s personality). Maladaptive behavior represents a mistaken style of life that reflects inadequate social interest. Adler’s teleological approach regards BEHAVIOUR as being largely MOTIVATED by a person’s FUTURE GOALS rather than determined by past events.
Psychiatric Inpatients (Demographic Characteristics)
Research on the utilization rates of mental health services has provided the following information about the demographic characteristics of psychiatric inpatients: (1) For both men and women, admission rates into psychiatric hospitals are lowest among the widowed, intermediate for those who are married or divorced/separated, and highest for the never married. (2) Although Whites represent the largest number of psychiatric inpatients, when population proportions are taken into account, patients from other races are overrepresented. (3) For both men and women, the largest proportion of admissions is in the 25 to 44 age range.
Emic Vs. Etic Orientation
Emit and etic refer to different orientations to understanding and describing cultures. An emic orientation is culture-specific and involves understanding the culture from the perspective of members of that culture. An etic orientation is culture-general and assumes that UNIVERSALISTIC principles can be applied to all cultures.
Network Therapy
Network therapy has been identified as an effective intervention for American Indian clients and is often used as a treatment for alcohol and drug abuse. It is a multimodal treatment that incorporates family and community members into the treatment process and situates an individual’s problems within the context of his/her family, workplace, community, and other social systems.
Treatment Manuals
Treatment manuals were originally developed to standardize psychotherapeutic treatments so their effects could be empirically evaluated and to provide guidelines for training therapists. They specify the theoretical underpinnings of the treatment along with treatment goals and specific therapeutic guidelines and strategies. A potential limitation of treatment manuals is that they may oversimplify the therapeutic process.