Therapies - Concepts & Theories Flashcards
What is psychotherapy?
A systematic interaction between a therapist and a client that brings psychological principles to bear on influencing the client’s thoughts, feelings, and/or behavior to help that client overcome psychological disorders, adjust to problems in living, or develop as an individual.
Asylums
An institution for the care of the mentally ill.
-originated in European monasteries. They were the first institutions meant primarily for people with psychological disorders. But their function was warehousing, not treatment. As their inmate populations mushroomed, the stresses created by noise, overcrowding, and disease aggravated the problems they were meant to ease. Inmates were frequently chained and beaten.
Mental hospitals
In the United States, mental hospitals gradually replaced asylums. In the mid-1950s, more than a million people resided in state, county, Veterans Administration, or private facilities. (The number has dropped to about 200,000 today.) The mental hospital’s function is treatment, not warehousing. Still, because of high patient populations and understaffing, many patients receive little attention even today. Despite somewhat improved conditions, one psychiatrist may be responsible for the welfare of several hundred residents on a weekend when other staff members are absent.
Community Health Movement
Since the 1960s, efforts have been made to maintain people with serious psychological disorders in their communities. Community mental health centers attempt to maintain new patients as outpatients and to serve patients who have been released from mental hospitals. Today, most people with chronic psychological disorders live in the community, not the hospital. Social critics note that many people who had resided in hospitals for decades were suddenly discharged to “home” communities that seemed foreign and forbidding to them. Many do not receive adequate follow-up care. Many join the ranks of the homeless.
Psychodynamic Therapy
A type of psychotherapy that is based on Freud’s thinking and that assumes that psychological problems reflect early childhood experiences and internal conflicts.
What is Psychodynamic Therapy based on?
The thinking of Sigmund Freud, the founder of psychodynamic theory. Such therapies assume that psychological problems reflect early childhood experiences and internal conflicts. According to Freud, these conflicts involve the shifting of psychic, or libidinal, energy among the three psychic structures—the id, ego, and superego. These shifts of psychic energy determine our behavior. When primitive urges threaten to break through from the id or when the superego floods us with excessive guilt, defenses are established to protect us from these feelings; yet they are not completely eliminated, so we may experience some distress. Freud’s psychodynamic therapy method—psychoanalysis—aims to modify the flow of energy among these structures, largely to bulwark the ego against the torrents of energy loosened by the id and the superego. With impulses and feelings of guilt and shame placed under greater control, clients are freer to develop adaptive behavior.
Ego Analyst
A psychodynamically oriented therapist who focuses on the conscious, coping behavior of the ego instead of the hypothesized, unconscious functioning of the id.
What are the essentials of Psychotherapy?
- Systematic interaction: Psychotherapy is a systematic interaction between a client and a therapist. The therapist’s theoretical point of view interacts with the client’s to determine how the therapist and client relate to each other.
- Psychological principles: Psychotherapy is based on psychological theory and research in areas such as personality, learning, motivation, and emotion.
- Thoughts, feelings, and behavior: Psychotherapy influences clients’ thoughts, feelings, and behavior. It can be aimed at any or all of these aspects of human psychology.
- Psychological disorders, adjustment problems, and personal growth: Psychotherapy is often used with people who have psychological disorders. Other people seek help for problems such as shyness, overeating, and adjusting to loss of a life partner. Still other clients want to learn more about themselves and to reach their full potential as individuals, parents, or creative artists.
Psychoanalysis
Is the clinical method devised by Freud for plucking “from the memory a rooted sorrow,” for razing “out the written troubles of the brain.” It aims to provide insight into the conflicts that are presumed to lie at the roots of a person’s problems. Insight means many things, including knowledge of the experiences that lead to conflicts and maladaptive behavior, recognition of unconscious feelings and conflicts, and conscious evaluation of one’s thoughts, feelings, and behavior.
Psychoanalysis
-Free Association (in depth)
Freud used free association to break through the walls of defense that block a client’s insight into unconscious processes. In free association, the client is made comfortable—for example, by lying on a couch—and asked to talk about any topic that comes to mind. No thought is to be censored—that is the basic rule. Psychoanalysts ask their clients to wander “freely” from topic to topic, but they do not believe that the process occurring within the client is fully free. Repressed impulses clamor for release.
Psychoanalysis
-Free Association (basic definition)
In psychoanalysis, the uncensored uttering of all thoughts that come to mind.
Psychoanalysis
-Resistance (in depth)
The ego persists in trying to repress unacceptable impulses and threatening conflicts. As a result, clients might show resistance to recalling and discussing threatening ideas. A client about to entertain such thoughts might claim, “My mind is blank.” The client might accuse the analyst of being demanding or inconsiderate. He might “forget” the next appointment when threatening material is about to surface.
Psychoanalysis
-Resistance (basic definition)
The tendency to block the free expression of impulses and primitive ideas—a reflection of the defense mechanism of repression.
Psychoanalysis
-Interpretation (in depth)
The therapist observes the dynamic struggle between the client’s compulsion to utter certain thoughts and, at the same time, her resistance to uttering them. Through discreet remarks, the analyst tips the balance in favor of utterance. A gradual process of self-discovery and self-insight ensues. Now and then, the analyst offers an interpretation of an utterance, showing how it suggests resistance or deep-seated feelings and conflicts.
Psychoanalysis
-Interpretation (basic definition)
In psychoanalysis, an explanation of a client’s utterance according to psychoanalytic theory.
Psychoanalysis
-Transference (in depth)
Freud believed that clients not only responded to him as an individual but also in ways that reflected their attitudes and feelings toward other people in their lives. He labeled this process transference. For example, a young woman client might respond to Freud as a father figure and displace her feelings toward her father onto Freud, perhaps seeking affection and wisdom.
Psychoanalysis
-Transference (basic definition)
Responding to one person (such as a spouse or the psychoanalyst) in a way that is similar to the way one responded to another person (such as a parent) in childhood.
Client Centered Therapy (basic definition)
Carl Rogers’s method of psychotherapy, which emphasizes the creation of a warm, therapeutic atmosphere that frees clients to engage in self-exploration and self-expression.
Client Centered Therapy (in depth)
Carl Rogers (1902–1987) believed that we are free to make choices and control our destinies despite the burdens of the past. He also believed that we have natural tendencies toward health, growth, and fulfillment. Psychological problems arise from roadblocks placed in the path of self-actualization, which Rogers believed was an inborn tendency to strive to realize one’s potential. If, when we are young, other people approve of us only when we are doing what they want us to do, we may learn to disown the parts of ourselves to which they object. As a result, we may experience stress and discomfort and the feeling that we—or the world—are not real. Client-centered therapy aims to provide insight into the parts of us that we have disowned so that we can feel whole. It creates a warm, therapeutic atmosphere that encourages self-exploration and self-expression. The therapist’s acceptance of the client is thought to foster self-acceptance and self-esteem. Self-acceptance frees the client to make choices that develop his or her unique potential.
Client Centered Therapy
-Empathy
In client-centered therapy, the ability to perceive a client’s feelings from the client’s frame of reference. Recognition of the client’s experiences and feelings. Therapists view the world through the client’s frame of reference by setting aside their own values and listening closely.
Client Centered Therapy
-Genuineness
In client-centered therapy, openness and honesty in responding to the client. Openness and honesty in responding to the client. Client-centered therapists must be able to tolerate differentness, based on the belief that every client is different in important ways.
Client Centered Therapy
-Active Listening
Is a communication technique that requires the listener to feed back what they hear to the speaker, by way of re-stating or paraphrasing what they have heard in their own words, to confirm what they have heard and moreover, to confirm the understanding of both parties.