Cognitive Behaviour Therapy Flashcards
What are the steps of a formulation? (1-6)
- what you mean by formulation
- the problem
- the patient’s strengths
- how you collected the information
- what typically happens before
- what typically happens after
What are the steps of a formulation? (7-12)
- what makes it worse or better
- why the problem occurs
- how you know this
- what interventions are needed
- who agrees with the formulation
- how the formulation might be checked
What is stoicism?
reason can overcome our assumptions and emotions to help us find equanimity in the face of life’s vicissitudes
Complete the quote “a person can ___ ___ ___ their own life and can learn to become ___ ___ ___”
A person can exert control over their own life and can learn to become their own therapist
What is the interdependence principle?
Cognitions, emotions, behaviour and physiology interact to determine psychological function and ‘problems’. Changing conditions or behaviour can have an impact on the others,
Why is CBT empirical?
Emphasis on measurable and observable phenomena; theories and treatments in CBT should be evaluated rigorously; testing out hypotheses is key in CBT
What are the 3 parts of the ABC model?
Activating Event
Beliefs
Consequences
What are two assessment measures?
Beck Anxiety Inventory (BAI)
Beck Depression Inventory (BDI)
What is CBT’s approach to assessment?
History of the problem ABCs Diaries Psychometric assessment Perspective of others
What are 10 classical CBT terms?
Thinking errors/faulty information processing, Negative automatic thoughts. Arbitrary inference, Selective Abstraction, Overgeneralisation, Minimisation and Maximisation
Personalisation
Absolutistic dichotomous thinking
Describe CBT
Structured, short-term, present-oriented
Focused on cogniton
Directed towards solving current problems and modifying dysfunctional thinking and behaviour
Collaborative
According to the cognitive model, people’s emotions, behaviours and physiology are influenced by what?
Our perception of events
What are core beliefs?
Beliefs that start in childhood and are global, rigid and overgeneralised
What are intermediate beliefs?
Attitudes, rules or assumptions that people create by categorising the information
What are automatic thoughts?
Quick, evaluative and situation specific