Title: Chapter 8: The Selection of Patients
1Chapter 8 The Selection of Patients
- The Theory and Practice of Group Psychotherapy
- Irvin Yalom, Ph.D.
2Who Wants To Be A Millionaire
- For 1,000
- How important is selection of patients for a
group? - Why?
3Who Wants To Be A Millionaire
- For 5,000
- Therefore, is it possible that the process of
member selection can lead to the failure of a
group? Explain.
4Who Wants To Be A Millionaire
- For 10,000
- So, should any patient be sent to group?
- For 20,000
- How effective is group therapy?
5Who Wants To Be A Millionaire
- For 40,000
- How do group clinicians select their patients?
6The Selection of Patients
- The material has disturbingly disjunctive
nature - Central organizing principle consider when the
punishments or disadvantages of group membership
outweigh the rewards or the anticipated rewards. - What the patient must pay and his/her influence
on the group. - Patient should also play a role in selection
- Provide info expectations, length, objective,
rewards.
7The Selection of Patients
- The rewards are associated with previously
reported benefits. - If it meets personal needs
- If they derive satisfaction from the
interpersonal interaction - If they derive satisfaction from their
participating in the group task - If they derive satisfaction from group membership
8The Selection of Patients
- Satisfying Personal Needs
- The group must relieve some discomfort
- This discomfort is associated with the level of
motivation for change. - Satisfaction depends on the pts position in the
group communication network and how he/she is
valued. - Hence, in marketing or conditioning discomfort
level is magnified in order to increase need. How
do you do that in group dynamics if you want? - Relationship between the discomfort and
suitability for group is curvilinear
9The Relationship between Discomfort and
Motivation
- Yerkes -Dodson Curve
- Low unwilling to pay the price
- Moderate willing to be the price
- High unable to pay the price,over-whelmed,
unable to tolerate - These acute pts would be good for what type of
group?
10 The Selection of Patients
- Satisfaction from the interpersonal interaction
- Generally, associated with the attraction toward
the group- this one factor may dwarf others - This above all others is a slow process.
- Initially, pts are contemptuous of themselves and
others. - They will use the therapist as the transitional
object - Parloff has demonstrated that this will help pts
approach others with a positive perception.
11The Selection of Patients
- Satisfaction participating in Group tasks
- Pts that cant reveal, introspect, care for
others and manifest feelings will struggle with
this one.
12The Selection of Patients
- Selection of patients is the process of
DESELECTION. - In others words, the practice of selecting often
is deselecting particular pts and including
everyone else. - Empirical studies and clinical observations due
more to provide us with data for exclusion or
what doesnt work interpersonally than what
works.
13Criteria for Exclusion
- Almost all pts will fit into some groups. The
question becomes which type of group. - Poor candidates for a heterogeneous outpatient
therapy group are those with brain damage,
paranoid, hypochondriacal, substance abusers,
acutely psychotic or sociopaths. But WHY is a
better point to focus on. - Because eventually they will manifest their
inability to relate and will dominate the group,
manipulate or be aloof.
14Criteria for Exclusion
- DROP OUTS
- Drop out during their initial interview were more
hostile and spontaneous or passive. - Grotjahn studied long term outpatient analytic
group and concluded that 40 of the dropouts were
predictable. - 1. pts with dx of pending psychotic breakdowns
- 2. pts that used group for an acute crisis
- 3. Highly schizoid
- Dropouts were more socially ineffective. Who
this class deals with such clients
15Criteria for Exclusion
- Hence studies suggest that drop outs tend to have
following characteristics high denial, high
somatization, low motivation, low ses, low social
effectiveness, low IQ, psychotic pathology. - Reasons for dropping
- External factors
- Group deviancy
- Problems with intimacy
- Fear of emotional contagion
- Inability to share the therapist
- Complications of concurrent individual therapy
- Inadequate orientation
- Complications from subgrouping
16Reasons for Dropping
- External factors- physical reasons, schedule ,
babysitting, transportation leading to increases
stress. Rationalization as well. - Group deviant someone that represents an
extreme in at least one dimension- age, economic,
education, gender. - They remain as an outsider and slow the group
down- by remaining on another interpersonal level
(avoidance,etc) - Lieberman, Yalom and Miles concluded that such
pts will not benefit and possible adversely
affected - According to Schacters study, communication
toward a deviant is very high initially then
drops off as deviant stands out over time.
17Reasons fro Dropping
- Problems of Intimacy- Individuals that manifest
their intimate conflicts in various ways. - Schizoid withdrawal
- Maladaptive self disclosure
- Unrealistic demands for instant intimacy
- Fear of Emotional Contagion- afraid that they may
become as depressed or disturbed as others. - This typically comes from individuals that appear
to have permeable ego boundaries (i.e.
borderline).
18Criteria for Inclusion
- Desire for change
- Ability to face ones deficiencies, even to the
point of undue self criticism and a degree of
sensitivity to the feelings of others seem - Pts with significant transference issues
- Pts attraction to the group and popularity
- Popularity self disclosure, introspective and
active
19Chapter 9 The Composition of Therapy Groups
- The Theory and Practice of Group Psychotherapy
- Irvin Yalom, Ph.D.
20Questions to Consider
- Is group behavior predictable?
- Is so, to what degree?
- How useful do YOU THINK is the DSM or structured
interview in predicting group behavior? - What would you focus in order to assess for group
behavior?
21Questions to Consider
- Is ones behavior relatively consistent in
different groups with similar tasks at hand? - If so, how would you as a clincian get your best
prediction? - Are there any ideal, research based guidelines
for the most effective group composition?
22Questions to Consider
- Homogenous or Heterogenous? Which do you prefer?
- What guidelines would you use?
23Predicting Group Behavior
- Since the interaction of the group members
determine the fate of the group, focusing on
certain compositions may allow for a MIX that
facilitates this interaction. - Screenings
- Standard DX Interview predictions are highly
remote inferences - Dx not as useful as observing function and length
of illness.
24Predicting Group Behavior
- Interpersonal Nosological System
- Karen Horney move toward, against or away
- Toward conduct with currency of love
- Against search for mastery
- Away withdrawal in order for withdrawal
- Personality characteristics Melnick Rose
study found that social risk taking propensity
and self disclosure most important
characteristics. - Interaction in previous groups future
25Predicting Group Behavior
- Interpersonal Intake interview
- assess interpersonal style
- hx of interpersonal interaction
- social network
- participation in organizations
- relationships
- etc
26Predicting Group Behavior
- Direct sampling of group relevant behavior
- Powdermaker and Frank concluded that the
interpersonal interview with a psychiatric
interview gives enough information to make valid
and reliable predictions.
27Predicting Group Behavior
- The more the similar the intake is to the group
situation the better. - Yaloms example of the group of pts with dx of
schizoid personality. P258 - Despite homogeneity, allow or encourage the
differences to manifest.
28Composition of Group
- A groups composition influences certain short
term predictable characteristics (e.g. high
cohesion, high conflict, high flight, high
dependency) which highly predict a groups
performance. - Two major approaches are
- heterogeneous approach
- homogeneous approach
29Heterogeneous approach
- Advantageous for long term intensive
interactional - Good for ambitious personality change goals
- Can lead to an isolate p.256
- Role heterogeneity (task leader, champion,
dependent, moral leader) - better for self actualization
- but can lead to additional conflict
30Heterogeneous approach
- Social Microcosm Theory
- group miniature social universe
- Dissonance Theory
- allows for dissonance
- There is no empirical evidence that deliberately
composed heterogeneous groups facilitate therapy.
31Homogeneous approach
- Cohesiveness theory
- there is an attraction to the group
- less conflicts and better attendance
- good for short term work
- not enough dissonance so everyone reinforces
everyone - faster sx relief due to faster support
- A small amount of research support the
cohesiveness theory. This approach allows for
factors mentioned above to unfold that directly
influence results.
32COMPOSITION
- Principle -
- heterogeneity in pts conflict areas and patterns
of coping and at the same time striving for
homogeneity of the pts degree of vulnerability
and capacity to tolerate anxiety - The more structure and briefer the group, the
less important is composition.
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