Title: Cultural issues in Psychotherapy
1Cultural issues in Psychotherapy
2- Cultural considerations in the teaching and
evaluation of psychotherapy - Major studies assessing efficacy of psychotherapy
have generally not considered cultural variables
( 1-13) - gtgt one recent U.S review concluded
empirically supported therapies are culturally
sensitive therapies for one ethnic minority
group European Americans ( Hall, 2001) - Evaluative studies that exist are almost entirely
descriptive (14-16)
3- many British psychotherapists privately suggest
that therapy is not appropriate for minority
groups because of their supposed lack of verbal
facility or the ability to understand and work
through their problems in a way that accords
with the psychological model Roland Littlewood
(2000) - Psychotherapy is less often offered to minority
group patients ( Littlewood and Lipsedge (1997)
4 adapting psychotherapy to non-western clients
(or when there is a large cultural distance
between clinician and client).
- Preliminary assumptions
- all psychotherapy is intercultural
- There are some general characteristics of all
psychotherapies - The therapist needs to be self-reflexive and
able to question his or her assumptions about the
patient as well as the patients assumptions
about the therapist and the therapy ( Bhugra and
Bhui (2001). - Modification of technique will be necessary when
working with clients for whom psychotherapeutic
approaches are culturally alien
5- A case study.
- A 46 year old married Vietnamese( ethnic
Chinese) - Australian woman, came to Australia in
early 1980s as part of the refugee resettlement
program. Two adolescent children. Reported
decreased activity, energy, and ability to work
in factory employment. Says that she is
uncharacteristically irritable with children.
6adapting psychotherapy to non-western clients (or
when there is a large cultural distance between
clinician and client).Cont..
- Areas of particular clinical attention
- 1.Expectation of a prescriptive approach and
assistance with practical problems - - eg settlement issues special problems of
asylum seekers and refugees - 2. Presumptions regarding the relationships
between thought, affect, behaviour and personal
history have to be questioned. - 3. Somatization and psychologization
- 4. The use of catharsis.
- 5. Transference and countertransference
- 6. Working with interpreters in psychotherapy
- 7. family inclusive individual therapy
- 8.The concept of self sources of esteem,
disappointment and shame - 9. Over and under-attribution to culture by the
clinician and client.
71.Expectation of a prescriptive approach and
assistance with practical problems
- - the refugee may expect to be cured quickly.
The idea that his complaints will disappear if
he learns more about himself through a long
series of talks is both strange and difficult to
comprehend ( Guus van der Veer, 1998 p76) -
- - practical issues re settlement special
problems of asylum seekers and refugees ( 23) - - resistance to addressing psychological
issues? -
82. Presumptions regarding the relationships
between thought, affect, behaviour and personal
history
- Identifying cognitive distortions assumes
cultural knowledge. - - According to CBT common cognitive errors in
depression include arbitrary inference,
personalization, selective abstraction ( and
confirmation bias), over-generalization,
magnification and minimization. Occur
particularly in relation to judgements re the
self, the future and the persons circumstances.
92. (cont). Presumptions regarding the
relationships between thought, affect, behaviour
and personal history
- I feel inadequate because I cannot provide for
my parents in my country. - I am dishonoured by the disrespect my children
show me. - I must avoid my compatriots because my life would
be impossible if they found out I left my husband
for someone else. - When Im alone I hear a child crying, and I know
my daughter is suffering - What I have suffered ( rape by enemy soldiers)
means I have been robbed of self-respect for ever
and I will never again experience true happiness.
102.(cont). Presumptions regarding the
relationships between thought, affect, behaviour
and personal history
- The most powerful and organizing defense used by
depressive people is introjectionIn working with
depressive patients, one can practically hear the
internalized object speaking. When a client says
something like, it must be because Im selfish,
a therapist can ask, whos saying that?..the
kind of introjection that characterizes
depressive people is the unconscious
internalization of the more hateful qualities of
an old love object. His or her positive
attributes are generally remembered fondly,
while negative ones are felt as part of the self
- - Nancy McWilliams (1994) Psychoanalytic
Diagnosis p232
112. (cont). Presumptions regarding the
relationships between thought, affect, behaviour
and personal history
- History taking and historical interpretation
- - developmental models, the relevance of prior
experience ( the child is father of man ) - vs fate, preordination
12- 3. Somatization and psychologization
- (24-27)
- 4. The use of catharsis ( 28,29)
13- 5. Transference and countertransference
- 6. Working with interpreters in psychotherapy (
30,31) - 7. family inclusive individual therapy
14- 8.The concept of self sources of esteem,
disappointment and shame - 9. Over and under-attribution to culture by the
clinician and client.
15summary
- All psychotherapy is cross-cultural, but with
increased cultural distance, more explicit
attention needs to be paid to cultural variables - Some of the significant cultural dimensions have
been identified. The clinician consciously
invokes these dimensions in undertaking the
anthropological exercise of understanding the
culturally diverse client. - gtgt the constituents of psychotherapy
interpreting affect, empathic understanding etc
require ongoing critical appraisal .