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Challenging Issues in Clinical Practice

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Title: Challenging Issues in Clinical Practice


1
Challenging Issues in Clinical Practice
  • From Andrew Page and Werner Stritzke
  • (in preparation)
  • Handbook for Clinical Psychology Trainees. New
    York Cambridge University Press.

2
Introduction
  • Psychologist How have things been going this
    past week?
  • Client Pretty good. Ive been doing what you
    asked me and Ive noticed that the anxiety is a
    lot less than it was.
  • P In terms of the fear thermometer that you
    were using each day to rate your anxiety as
    homework, what sort of ratings did you get?
  • C Well I didnt put them in my diary, but I
    thought about it each day and Ive remembered my
    ratings.
  • P Thats OK. I dont actually need you to do
    the homework, but it would be really good if did
    it next week instead because it might show
    something useful.
  • C Yeah, no worries at all.

3
(No Transcript)
4
A Model of Resistance and Non-compliance
5
Managing Homework Compliance
  • Not an insignificant problem because homework
    assignments play an important role in outcome
    (Burns Auerbach, 1992), such that clients who
    are less reliable demonstrate worse outcomes
  • Kazantzis, Deane, Ronan (2000) found that
    setting homework accounted for 13 of the
    variance in outcomes (r .36) and homework
    compliance accounted for 5 (r .22) in
    therapeutic outcomes.
  • important and worthwhile to encourage clients to
    conduct homework assignments, especially given
    that this is a factor that is potentially under
    therapist control to some degree (Bryant, Simons,
    Thase, 1999).
  • amount of time allocated to homework, given that
    these activities can predict 13 of the outcome.
    Do they occupy 13 of therapy time (i.e., about 8
    mins per hour)?
  • the amount of variance in outcomes explained by
    homework is significant, it remains low.
    Therefore, if compliance is becoming contentious,
    perhaps it is better to build upon the clients
    strengths?

6
Managing Homework Compliance (Birchler, 1988)
  • First, he suggests that the psychologist should
    only provide homework assignments once a
    satisfactory level of rapport has been
    established.
  • Second, any homework that is prescribed
    corresponds to the therapeutic goals.
    Accordingly, the psychologist needs to create an
    expectation that completing homework will
    alleviate presenting problems.
  • Third, he encourages the psychologist to involve
    the client in planning homework be the task one
    of assessment or treatment. By maximising the
    perception of control and willing participation,
    the likelihood of compliance will increase.

7
Managing Homework Compliance (Birchler, 1988)
  • Fourth, the psychologist must check that any
    assignment does not exceed the clients present
    motivational levels - consider factors such as
    time, energy, and cost.
  • Sixth, reduce any threatening or
    anxiety-provoking aspects of homework.
  • Seven, make sure that any tasks are specific and
    clear.
  • Asking a client to repeat or to paraphrase
    instructions can assist this process.
  • Giving written assignments and reminder notes can
    also help.
  • Consider any possible secondary gain if the
    client does not comply.
  • Finally, he recommends that the psychologist
    reviews homework assignments. During the review
    the therapist should provide support for the
    client, help to shape early attempts into correct
    behaviour, and to acknowledge positive efforts.

8
Managing Homework Compliance
  • Thus, when giving homework it is important to
    allocate time to the process.
  • Prescription of homework assignments will involve
  • (i) explaining why you are asking the client to
    do the homework,
  • (ii) getting the clients involvement and
    commitment,
  • (iii) describing the homework in details,
  • (iv) requesting that the client paraphrase and
    then practice the exercise.
  • In addition, homework must be essential to
    therapy.
  • If the assessment or the task is not essential to
    the process and progress of therapy, then why are
    you wasting the clients time with it?
  • If the homework is essential, then it follows
    that you will review the homework exercise at the
    start of the next session.
  • Some have even suggested that if homework is not
    completed, then consider cutting session short
    (Jacobson) and postponing the sections of the
    sessions that required the homework until the
    following week

9
Example (OCD)
  • Ground Rules
  • Keep looking
  • Dont put knife away or hide it
  • Keep concentrating on the knife
  • Goal and Steps
  • Sit alone with a picture of a vegetable knife for
    2 minutes (6 times per day until 75 sure of
    being able to do next step)
  • Sit alone with a picture of a vegetable knife for
    5 minutes
  • Sit alone holding a plastic knife for 5 minutes
  • Sit alone holding a plastic knife for 10 minutes
  • Sit alone holding a bread butter knife for 2
    minutes
  • Sit alone holding a vegetable knife for 5 minutes
  • Sit alone holding a vegetable knife for 7 minutes
  • Sit alone holding a vegetable knife for 8 minutes
  • Sit alone holding a vegetable knife for 10
    minutes
  • Sit alone holding a vegetable knife for 15 minutes

10
Example (Cont)
11
What is therapeutic resistance?
  • the most elaborate rationalisation that
    therapists employ to explain their treatment
    failures (Lazarus Fay, 1982)
  • rejection of the clients goals by the
    therapist. (Stewart, 1983)
  • the sincere desire to change confronts the
    fears, misconceptions, and prior adaptive
    strategies that make change difficult (Wachtel,
    1982)
  • basic reluctance to explore, to understand, to
    grow and change (Blatt Erlich, 1982)
  • a bad fit between the therapist and the family
    (Heyman Abrams, 1982)
  • patterns and transactions in family therapy that
    prevent change (Glick Kessler, 1980).
  • major ingredient for therapy or problem that must
    be dealt with so that therapy can return to its
    objectives?

12
What is therapeutic resistance?
  • We suggest that the psychologist should take
    responsibility for dealing with resistance
    (without taking inappropriate blame for poor
    therapeutic outcomes). (e.g., teachers with
    problem children)
  • View therapeutic resistance as issue to be
    addressed in the overall plan of therapy, not a
    reason or an explanation for therapeutic failure.
  • problem-focused approach to resistance
  • adopt a transtheoretical approach to resistance
    and non-compliance - the goal is the amelioration
    of the clients problems, and the clinicians job
    is to help the client achieve this goal.
  • Resistance and non-compliance can be used as a
    treatment target or addressed as a problem,
    depending upon the psychologists judgment about
    the best way to achieve the goal of treatment.

13
Identifying Resistance
14
Ways to Manage Resistance During the Therapeutic
Process
  • Contacting client before first session will
    increase probability client will attend
  • Establish credibility as a competent professional
    who can create the context for change
  • Begin treatment by establishing rapport
  • Model good listening behaviour
  • Provide a clear rationale for the tests and give
    strong encouragement about completing the
    testing.
  • Provide the client with clear and informative
    feedback on the testing.
  • Employ strategies that increase the engagement of
    the client in therapy.
  • Reinforce completion of homework assignments

15
Ways to Manage Resistance During the Therapeutic
Process
  • Provide clear problem formulation and explicit
    rationale for treatment
  • Convey optimism about change and establish a
    collaborative set.
  • Predict possible obstacles to treatment that flow
    from formulation.
  • When resistance or non-compliance occurs identify
    it as resistance (use a less judgmental
    description, such as problem in therapy or we
    seem to be encountering some difficulties), make
    explicit what the issue is, work with the client
    to identify the meaning and function of the
    resistance, and then respond accordingly
  • Why?

16
Ways to Manage Resistance During the Therapeutic
Process
  • Psychologist miscommunicated or client has
    difficulty comprehending.
  • unmotivated due to a lack of expectation of
    success
  • slow or erratic therapeutic progress so review
    the case to ensure that all the problems have
    been identified, the treatment is appropriate for
    the problem and the particular type of client.
  • client will present with a meaningful behavioural
    pattern or sequence that is a manifestation of
    the problem, or part thereof.
  • challenges of the psychologist - wise not to be
    defensive, but make concern explicit, and to deal
    with challenge by addressing it. Sometime the
    situation can be defused through humour (although
    this has the potential to backfire if the client
    interprets a humorous retort as belittling them
    or the concern). At other times the concern can
    be dealt with by citing appropriate data or it
    might be appropriate to refer the client to
    another therapist.

17
Ways to Manage Resistance During the Therapeutic
Process
  • Addressing termination in an explicit manner in
    important. This allows the client to plan for
    termination, to deal with any grief and loss
    which may be experienced, and to raise any
    further matters which should be dealt with before
    termination is complete.
  • Phasing treatment sessions so that they are
    spaced a greater distances can be beneficial, as
    can setting a formal follow-up session (so that
    the client does not feel abandoned at the end of
    treatment). It is also useful during the latter
    phases of treatment and into termination to
    reinforce independence.
  • Cognitive behaviour therapists have suggested
    that the clinician can engage in a search
    destroy (Epstein, 1985 Jacobson, 1984)
    approach.
  • Can treat resistance by reframing the attitudes
    actions.
  • Psychologist can train client in skills that will
    not only be useful in addressing problems, but
    can be used in therapy to discuss and resolve
    resistance in ways that do not involve
    non-compliance and passive resistance

18
Ways to Manage Resistance During the Therapeutic
Process
  • symptom prescription. In this circumstance,
    the problem behaviour (or symptom) is actually
    given to the client as an instruction (or
    prescription).

19
Consider?
  • Ways to Handle Blocks to Progress in Therapy A
    Client Guide

20
Train Client in Problem Solving
  • 1 Identify the Problem
  • Realising that you have a problem is one thing,
    correctly identifying it is another. You may
    know that something is wrong with your car
    because it makes strange noises, but knowing what
    part to replace requires careful thought and
    diagnosis.
  • 2 Brainstorm Solutions
  • Write down as many solutions as possible. Do not
    try to keep them in your head because this causes
    confusion.
  • 3 Chose One Solution
  • Weigh up the positive and negative aspects of
    each solution. Choose the one most likely to
    succeed.
  • 4 Implement One Solution
  • Think how you are going to put your chosen
    solution into practice and then do it.
  • 5 Evaluate the Outcome
  • Later, check if your chosen solution worked. If
    unsuccessful, go back and implement the second
    best solution. Keep working until you solve the
    problem or decide to brainstorm new solutions.

21
Motivational Interviewing
  • (Miller Rollnick, 1991)

22
Expressing Empathy.
  • An accurately empathic response responds to the
    meaning and emotion expressed in a communication,
    all the time accepting the validity of the
    person's experience.

23
Expressing Empathy
  • CLIENT Panics are the most terrifying
    experience I have ever had. Have you ever had a
    panic attack?
  • PSYCHOLOGIST 1. Yes, I think I have. It was
    during the war when we were under enemy fire ...
  • PSYCHOLOGIST 2 Although I've been anxious, it
    sounds as if you have found panic attacks to be
    quite different from the anxiety that you used to
    feel.

24
Expressing Empathy
  • CLIENT When I'm having a panic all my rational
    thoughts go out the window and I think I AM going
    to die of a heart attack.
  • PSYCHOLOGIST 1 But you have had many clean ECGs,
    your cholesterol is low, and you are young.
    Everything points against you actually dying of a
    heart attack.
  • PSYCHOLOGIST 2 It makes it difficult to stop the
    panic when the worry about dying becomes so
    overpowering.

25
Expressing Empathy
  • CLIENT I've had this problem with my husband
    for ten years, I've been to so many different
    psychologists it is not funny, and I haven't got
    better so far.
  • PSYCHOLOGIST 1 Well, we use a cognitive-behaviour
    al programme which is very successful and I'm
    very experienced in delivering the technique.
    You should improve quickly.
  • PSYCHOLOGIST 2 Having failed before it must have
    been hard to bring yourself along to the clinic.
    How did you motivate yourself?

26
Developing Discrepancies
  • Accepting the validity of a person's experiences
    does not necessarily involve accepting that
    clients stay as they are. Purpose of offering
    empirically validated treatments is to modify
    maladaptive cognitions and behaviour.
  • Miller and Rollnick (1991)
  • Vigorous confrontation leads to alienation of the
    client
  • Developing a discrepancy between the person's
    current behaviour (and its consequences) and
    future goals.
  • Every client presents to treatment with some
    degree of ambivalence. The task is to ensure
    that the rewards of recovery outweigh the
    benefits associated with the absence of change.
  • By drawing attention to where one is, in relation
    to where one wants to be, it is possible to
    increase awareness of the costs of a maladaptive
    behavioural pattern.
  • Focus upon costs that are seen as relevant to the
    client rather than the psychologist.
  • One satisfactory way to develop discrepancies
    between current behaviour and future goals is to
    enquire about what the person would most enjoy
    doing when unshackled from their panic disorder
    or agoraphobic avoidance.

27
Avoiding Argumentation
  • Once a person initiates treatment and begins to
    comply with the components of the programme
    setbacks invariably occur. An unsatisfactory way
    for a psychologist to respond is to harass the
    person to complete the exercise or berate their
    non-compliance
  • Miller and Rollnick (1991)
  • it is more profitable to avoid argumentation.
    They encourage the perception that therapeutic
    resistance is a signal of psychologist, rather
    than client, failure.
  • When a person refuses to complete an assignment
    it is time to stop forcing the point and shift
    strategy. The psychologist has a problem which
    they must take the responsibility to solve.
  • The shift towards problem solving enables the
    psychologist and client to avoid argumentation,
    overcome the difficulty, and is a critical part
    of rolling with resistance.

28
Rolling With Resistance
  • Therapeutic resistance may signal a lack of
    understanding of the purpose of part of the
    programme or it may indicate a lack of success
    with one of the treatment components.
  • Resistance may also indicate a weakening of
    resolve, indicating the need to develop a
    discrepancy to once again enhance motivation.
  • Whatever the case, the psychologist must
    back-track and solve the problem.
  • Rather than pushing against the resistance, the
    therapist can extract from the complaint or
    refusal a foundation of motivation upon which to
    re-build the treatment.

29
Rolling With Resistance
  • CLIENT I'm having a bad day with my
    agoraphobia. I don't think that I can do today's
    assignment.
  • PSYCHOLOGIST 1 You have to face your fears.
    Remember, avoidance makes fears worse. You will
    just have to go out and catch the bus.
  • PSYCHOLOGIST 2 When we agreed to the assignment
    yesterday you felt that it was achievable, how
    are you going to get yourself to be able to
    achieve the task?

30
Rolling With Resistance
  • CLIENT I did everything right, but I had a
    panic anyway. Your treatment just isn't working.
  • PSYCHOLOGIST l We know the treatments are
    effective, what do you think you did wrong?
  • PSYCHOLOGIST 2 Even though you battled hard to
    manage the mood, the depression broke through.
    Are there any lessons that you can learn to help
    you have greater success next time?

31
Supporting Self-Efficacy
  • Resistance in therapy can often follow a setback.
    At such times self-efficacy decreases as the
    person feels that successful mastery of their
    problem is no longer an achievable goal. In
    working with a client to overcome many disorders
    (e.g., mood, anxiety, substance use) it is
    particularly important to reverse decreases in
    self-efficacy.
  • Central to supporting self-efficacy is conveying
    the principle that change is possible

32
Supporting SE at Start of Rx
  • We have seen how fearful avoidance is driven by
    panic attacks and we have discussed how life
    would be different if you could be free from
    panic attacks. We know from past groups that
    around nine in ten people, just like you, become
    free from panic attacks. Free from panics not
    only in the short term, but we have followed
    these people for up to two years after treatment
    and they remain panic free. Although you may find
    this difficult to believe, our results are no
    different from other similar centres around the
    world.
  • However, I suspect that even though I have told
    you that people can learn to master panics you
    are thinking, "I bet I'm the one in ten who
    doesn't get better." Therefore, the more
    important question is not how many people are
    panic free, but how do you move from being the
    one in ten, to being one of the nine in ten? The
    simple answer is, you will need to work hard.
  • The techniques that we will teach you are
    effective and this is demonstrated by the high
    success rates. Our experience has shown us that
    those people who do not improve (i) do not put in
    the effort necessary to learn the techniques,
    (ii) do not practise the techniques, or (iii)
    give up and go back to using the strategies which
    they have used before to partially manage anxiety
    and panics. We will teach you new techniques
    which will enable you to control you panics. It
    is up to you to learn and practice the
    techniques, working hard to conquer the panics,
    because when you do, you can be free of panic.

33
Supporting SE Later in Rx
  • The second time when self-efficacy must be
    supported is during setbacks.
  • client is demoralised and possibly resistant to
    therapeutic interventions, it is necessary to
    solve any problems while conveying the belief
    that change is still possible.
  • The third, time when self-efficacy must be
    particularly supported is at the termination of
    treatment.
  • clients are often worried how they will fare
    without the support of the psychologist and if
    treatment has been in a group context, without
    the support and encouragement of other group
    members.
  • This difficulty can be tackled by reminding
    clients that the gains during treatment were due
    to their efforts.
  • In addition, it can be helpful to offer ongoing
    regular follow-up sessions.

34
References
  • Anderson, C. M., Stewart, S. (1983). Mastering
    resistance A practical guide to family therapy.
    New York Guilford Press.
  • Birchler, G. R. (1988). Handling resistance to
    change. In I. R. H. Falloon (Ed.), Handbook of
    behavioural marital therapy. London Hutchinson.
  • Burns, D. D., Auerbach, A. H. (1992). Does
    homework compliance enhance recovery from
    depression? Psychiatric Annals, 22, 464-469.
  • Bryant, M. J., Simons, A. D., Thase, M. E.
    (1999). Therapist skill and patient variables in
    homework compliance Controlling an uncontrolled
    variable in cognitive therapy outcome. Cognitive
    Therapy and Research, 23, 381-399.
  • Jacobson, N. S., Margolin, G. (1979). Marital
    therapy Strategies based on social and behavior
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  • Kazantzis, N., Deane, F. P., Ronan, K. R.
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    behavioural therapy A meta-analysis. Clinical
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  • Linehan, M. M. (1993). Skill training manual for
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    York Guilford Press.
  • Martin, G. A., Worthington, E. L. (1982).
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  • Miller, W. R., Rollnick, S. (1991).
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  • Openshaw, D. K. (1998). Increasing homework
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  • Shelton, J. L., Levy, R. L. (1979). Home
    practice activities and compliance Two sources
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  • Shelton, J. L., Levy, R. L. (1981a). A survey
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    in contemporary behavior therapy literature. The
    Behavior Therapist, 4, 13-14.
  • Shelton, J. L., Levy, R. L. (1981b). Behavioral
    assignments and treatment compliance A handbook
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  • Spinks, S. H., Birchler, G. R. (1982).
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  • Wachtel, P. (1982). Resistance Psychodynamic and
    behavioral approaches. New York Plenum.
  • Weiss, R. L. (1979). Resistance in behavioral
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    Therapy, 7, 3-6.
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