Module 29.3: Cognitive Psychological Interventions Flashcards
What are the different cognitive interventions?
- Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy
- Neutralizing
- Exposure and Response (Ritual) Prevention
- Beck’s Cognitive Therapy
- Aversion Therapy
- Relapse-Prevention Training
- Cognitive Processing Therapy
- Mentalization
- Affectual Awareness
- Positive Family Interaction Therapy
Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy
seek to help clients change both counterproductive behaviors and dysfunctional ways of thinking
What are the different types of CBT?
- Rational-Emotive Behavioral Therapy
- Mindfulness-Based CBT (Acceptance and
Commitment Therapy) - Behavioral Activation
- Cognitive Remediation
- Panic Control Treatment
- Enhanced CBT (CBT-E)
- Hallucination Reinterpretation and Acceptance
- Dialectical Behavior Therapy
Rational-Emotive Behavioral Therapy
change and identify irrational assumptions
Mindfulness-Based CBT (Acceptance and
Commitment Therapy)
“thoughts are mere events of mind”
Behavioral Activation
therapy for depression in which the client is guided systematically increase the number of constructive and pleasurable activities and events in his or her life
Cognitive Remediation
focuses on the cognitive impairments that often characterize people with schizophrenia, particularly their difficulties in attention, planning, and memory
Panic Control Treatment
clients are educated about the nature of anxiety and panic and involves teaching people with panic disorder to control their breathing, then people are taught about the logical errors that people who have panic disorders are prone to making and learn to subject their own automatic thoughts to logical re-analysis
Enhanced CBT (CBT-E)
focuses on addressing, disrupting, and modifying the factors that maintain the eating disorders
Hallucination Reinterpretation and Acceptance
designed to help how people view and react to their hallucinations, so they will not suffer the fear and confusion produced by their delusional misinterpretations
Dialectical Behavior Therapy
can help people who have difficulty with emotional regulation or are exhibiting self-destructive behaviors; accept the reality of their lives and their behaviors
Neutralizing
attempting to eliminate thoughts that one finds unacceptable by thinking or behaving in ways that make up for those thoughts and so put right internally
Exposure and Response (Ritual) Prevention
treatment of OCD that exposes client to anxiety-arousing thoughts or situations and then prevents the client from performing his or her compulsive acts
Beck’s Cognitive Therapy
people identify and change the maladaptive assumptions and ways of thinking that help cause their psychological disorders
Aversion Therapy
client is repeatedly presented with unpleasant stimuli while performing undesirable behavior such as taking drug