Clinical_Glossary_All_Terms_Flashcards
ACCULTURATION (BERRY)
According to Berry, a person’s level of acculturation can be described in terms of four categories that reflect the person’s adoption of their own culture and the culture of the dominant group – i.e., integration, assimilation, separation, or marginalization.
ACUPUNCTURE
Acupuncture is a traditional Asian method for restoring health and involves stimulating specific anatomical points on the body, usually with a thin metallic needle. The traditional explanation for its effects is that illness is due to a blockage of qi (vital life energy) and that acupuncture unblocks the flow of qi along the pathways through which it circulates in the body. Research suggests that its benefits may be due to the release of pain-suppressing substances or to an alteration in blood flow in areas around the needle or in certain regions of the brain.
ADLER’S INDIVIDUAL PSYCHOLOGY (TELEOLOGICAL APPROACH, STYLE OF LIFE)
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 behavior as being largely motivated by a person’s future goals rather than determined by past events.
ALLOPLASTIC VS. AUTOPLASTIC INTERVENTIONS
In the context of psychotherapy, alloplastic and autoplastic refer to the focus of an intervention with regard to the environment. The goal of an alloplastic intervention is to make changes in the environment, so it better accommodates the individual, while the goal of an autoplastic intervention is to change the individual so that they are better able to function effectively in their environment.
BLACK RACIAL (NIGRESCENCE) IDENTITY DEVELOPMENT MODEL
Cross’s Black Racial Identity Development Model consists of four stages: During the pre-encounter stage, race and racial identity have low salience. In the encounter stage, the person has greater racial/cultural awareness and is interested in developing a Black identity. In the immersion/emersion stage, race and racial identity have high salience and the person moves from intense Black involvement (immersion) to strong anti-White attitudes (emersion). Finally, during the internalization stage, race continues to have high salience and the person adopts an Afrocentric, biculturist, or multiculturist orientation.
COMMUNICATION/INTERACTION FAMILY THERAPY (SYMMETRICAL VS. COMPLEMENTARY COMMUNICATION)
The communication/interaction approach is associated with Jackson, Satir, Haley, and others and focuses on the impact of communication on family and individual functioning. It distinguishes between two communication patterns: Symmetrical communication occurs between equals but may escalate into a competitive one-upsmanship game, and complementary communication occurs between individuals who are unequal and emphasizes their differences.
CULTURAL COMPETENCE
Sue and Sue (2003) describe cultural competence as involving three competencies: the therapist’s awareness of their cultural assumptions, values, and beliefs; knowledge about the worldviews of culturally diverse clients; and skills that enable them to provide interventions that are appropriate and effective for culturally different clients.
CULTURAL ENCAPSULATION (WRENN)
Culturally encapsulated counselors interpret everyone’s reality through their own cultural assumptions and stereotypes and disregard cultural differences and their own cultural biases.
CULTURAL VS. FUNCTIONAL PARANOIA (RIDLEY)
Ridley described nondisclosure by African American therapy clients as being due to two types of paranoia: A client is exhibiting cultural paranoia (which is a healthy reaction to racism) when they do not disclose to a white therapist due to a fear of being hurt or misunderstood. A client is exhibiting functional paranoia (which is due to pathology) when they are unwilling to disclose to any therapist, regardless of race or ethnicity, as a result of mistrust and suspicion.
CYBERNETICS (POSTIVE AND NEGATIVE FEEDBACK LOOPS)
Cybernetics is concerned with communication processes and distinguishes between negative and positive feedback loops. A negative feedback loop reduces deviation and helps a system maintain the status quo, while a positive feedback loop amplifies deviation or change and thereby disrupts the system.
DIAGNOSTIC OVERSHADOWING
Diagnostic overshadowing was originally used to describe the tendency of health professionals to attribute all of a person’s psychiatric symptoms to their intellectual disabilities. Subsequent research found that diagnostic overshadowing also applies to other conditions and diagnoses.
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.
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.
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 universal principles can be applied to all cultures.
EVIDENCE-BASED TREATMENTS (EBTs)
The integration of the best available research with clinical expertise in the context of patient characteristics, culture, and preferences (APA Policy Statement on Evidence-Based Practice in Psychology, 2005).
EXTENDED FAMILY SYSTEMS THERAPY (DIFFERENTIATION, EMOTIONAL TRIANGLE, GENOGRAM)
Bowen’s approach to family therapy extends general systems theory beyond the nuclear family. Key terms include differentiation of self and emotional triangles: Differentiation refers to a person’s ability to separate their intellectual and emotional functioning, which helps keep the person from becoming “fused” with the emotions that dominate the family. An emotional triangle develops when a two-person system attempts to reduce instability or stress by recruiting a third person into the system. Therapy often begins with the construction of a genogram, which depicts the relationships between family members, the dates of significant life events, and other important information. The therapist often sees two members of the family (spouses) and forms a therapeutic triangle in which the therapist comes into emotional contact with the family members but avoids becoming emotionally triangled. The goal is to increase the differentiation of all family members.
EXISTENTIAL THERAPY
The existential therapies are derived from existential philosophy and share an emphasis on personal choice and responsibility for developing a meaningful life. They describe maladaptive behavior as the result of an inability to cope authentically with the ultimate concerns of existence – i.e., death, freedom, existential isolation, and meaninglessness.
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.
FEMINIST THERAPY (NONSEXIST THERAPY, SELF-IN-RELATION THEORY)
Feminist therapy is based on the premise that “the personal is political.” It focuses on empowerment and social change and acknowledges and minimizes the power differential inherent in the client-therapist relationship. Self-in-relation theory applies feminism to object relations theory and proposes that many gender differences can be traced to differences in the early mother-daughter and mother-son relationship. Feminist therapy must be distinguished from nonsexist therapy, which focuses more on the personal causes of behavior and personal change.
FREUDIAN PSYCHOANALYSIS (DEFENSE MECHANISMS, ANALYSIS)
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.
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.
GESTALT THERAPY (BOUNDARY DISTURBANCE, TRANSFERENCE, AWARENESS)
Gestalt therapy views “awareness” (a full understanding of one’s thoughts, feelings, and
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.