Title: Formulation and Intervention
1Formulation and Intervention
PREP Prevention and Recovery of Early
Psychosis
- Kate Hardy, Clin.Psych.D
- Post Doctoral Fellow
- Prodromal Assessment, Research and Treatment Team
(PART), UCSF - Kate.Hardy_at_ucsf.edu
2Objectives
- Be able to formulate a client using the stress
vulnerability model, linear model and Morrisons
Model of Psychosis - Develop this formulation collaboratively
- Use the formulation to identify where
intervention is required
3What is a formulation?
- A way of organizing the information gathered
through assessment - Proposes links between current symptoms and early
experiences - Sets agenda for intervention
- Attempts to explain timing of onset and factors
maintaining the symptoms - Developed collaboratively
- Can enhance alliance by showing insight and
interest into clients situation
4Stress Vulnerability Hypothesis
- Vulnerability from genetic factors/biological
factors - Stress factors from relationships, lifestyle,
substance abuse etc - Low vulnerability plus high stress may equal
mental health problems - High vulnerability plus low stress may equal
mental health problems - Can be used to challenge assumptions and
catastrophic view of psychosis and sense of
unpredictability
5Interpersonal Stress Feel lonely Only make
friends over the Internet, not in person
Adapted from UNSW Counseling Services Carver et
al., 1989
6Linear Formulation
- Event thought feeling behavior
- Useful in making sense of a behavior that
otherwise may seem bizarre or not understandable - Simple and may be tolerated when other more
complex formulations are not - Can identify level at which need to intervene
7Morrisons (2001) Model of Psychosis
- Positive symptoms are conceptualized as
intrusions into awareness - The interpretation, rather than the intrusion,
causes distress and disability - Symptoms are maintained by mood, arousal and
mal-adaptive cognitive-behavioral responses (e.g.
avoidance)
8Theoretical Model
9Client friendly version of the formulation
What happened
Event /intrusion
How I make sense of it
Beliefs about yourself
and others
Life experiences
What do you do when this
How does it
happens
make you feel
10Back to the original triangle
How I make sense of it
What do you do when this
How does it
happens
make you feel
11Intervention
- Psychoeducation
- Normalization
12Psychoeducation
- Should be based on case formulation
- Should be specific to the client and their
concerns and needs - Should incorporate strengths where possible
13Psychoeducation
- Stress Vulnerability Model
- Provides information on the relationship between
stress and genetic risk factors - Provide information about possible triggers and
risk factors for the individual - Drugs, decreased sleep, increased workload etc.
- Dispel myths of psychosis and provide facts
- Challenge negative media portrayals of psychosis
- Provide facts about what we know about psychosis
14Psychoeducation
- Can be associated with an increase in suicidal
thinking and depression - Be aware of this and assess
- Regular checks with the client to explore how
they are hearing this information
15Normalization
- Focus is on normalizing the experiences
- NOT dismissing them
- Again should be specific to the problems client
presents with - Consistent with the continuum hypothesis
-
16Normalization
Stress, Drugs, Trauma, Sleep deprivation
Bereavement
No experiences
Psychotic Experiences
17Normalization
- 5 of population hear voices (Tien 1991)
- People hear voices without coming into contact
with mental health services (Romme and Escher
1989) - 9 people hold delusional beliefs (van Os 2000)
- Common to see or hear loved one following
bereavement (Grimby 1993)
18Normalization intrusive thoughts
- Provide information on the prevalence and types
of intrusive thoughts - Experiment with thought suppression
19Normalization
- Should not minimize experiences or dismiss them
- Trying to decatastrophize
- Showing the client that they are having
experiences that are more common than they (and
many clinicians) realize