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Treatment Methods

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Title: Treatment Methods


1
Treatment Methods
  • Abnormal Psychology

2
Treatment in the textbook
  • chapter 3 is an overview of general issues
    involved in treatment
  • each chapter on specific disorders will include a
    section on treatment

3
How should we think about psychotherapy?
  • is it a form of entertainment (like
    palm-reading)?
  • a service (like investment counseling or SAT
    preparation)?
  • a medical treatment (like a drug or surgery)?

4
Basic principles for treatment
  • goal is to help person change
  • use treatments proven to work first
  • recommend treatments that work rather than what
    therapist likes
  • treatment works for many problems
  • it does not work for some problems

5
Forms of psychotherapy
  • Psychoanalytic therapy
  • Behavior therapy
  • Cognitive therapy
  • Client-centered therapy

6
Client-centered therapy
  • Carl Rogers (and others)
  • genuineness, accurate empathy, and unconditional
    positive regard
  • the basic building blocks of therapy

7
Common elements of psychotherapy
  • an intense, personal, confiding relationship
  • a myth, which includes
  • an explanation for the cause, and
  • an explanation for the solution

8
Common elements ofpsychotherapy
  • provision of information about the problem or the
    clients behavior
  • the placebo effect
  • success experiences and support

9
Assumptions in psychoanalysis
  • symptoms are symbolic of underlying conflict
  • symptoms are determined by defense mechanisms
  • insight will relieve symptoms

10
Psychoanalytic procedures
  • free association
  • dream interpretation
  • analysis of the transference

11
Behavior therapy assumptions
  • behavior is determined by antecedents and
    consequences
  • these are the causes (BT does worry about
    causes)
  • changing behavior can lead to emotional changes
  • insight is not enough

12
Behavior therapy procedures
  • exposure and response prevention
  • progressive muscle relaxation
  • skills training or behavioral rehearsal (e.g.,
    assertiveness training parent skills training
    communication training for couples)

13
Cognitive therapy assumptions
  • emotions determined by self-statements (not
    events themselves)
  • people aware of, and can discuss, cognitive
    events
  • intensity and duration of negative emotions can
    be diminished by teaching more rational cognitions

14
Cognitive therapy procedures
  • recognize maladaptive (irrational)
    self-statements
  • substitute adaptive cognitions
  • rehearsal (e.g., keeping daily diaries)

15
Psychopharmacology (OCD)
  • tricyclic antidepressants (TCAs)
  • clomipramine (Anafranil)
  • selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs)
  • fluoxetine (Prozac)

16
Medication and mental disorders
  • most discovered by accident
  • many are useful with various types of mental
    disorders
  • there are sometimes (often?) side-effects of
    varying levels of severity
  • compliance is an issue

17
Medication and mental disorders
  • they are seldom miracle cures
  • non-specific effects (e.g., anti-depressants work
    for panic)
  • some people dont respond at all
  • relapse rates are sometimes high following
    discontinuation

18
The need for treatment research
  • this field is notorious for embracing new
    treatments without data
  • lobotomy in the 1930s
  • eye-movement desensitization EMDR

19
Evaluating psychotherapy
  • must ask specific questions
  • what kind of treatment?
  • for what kind of problem?
  • administered by whom?

20
The experimental method
  • investigator has control of the independent
    variable
  • allows strong causal inferences
  • outcome research is one of the only situations in
    psychopathology that allows experiments to be done

21
Efficacy vs effectiveness
  • efficacy does it work in a pure laboratory
    environment?
  • effectiveness does it work in the real world?

22
Meta-analysis
  • lumping together results from several studies

23
How was change measured?
  • clinicians judgments of overall adjustment?
  • self-report of symptoms by clients?
  • other peoples ratings of social and occupational
    functioning?

24
Who gets counted?
  • everyone who started treatment?
  • only those who finished?
  • what about dropouts?

25
Control groups included?
  • no treatment group?
  • placebo control group?
  • can expectations be equated?
  • are waiting list groups ethical?

26
How was treatment defined?
  • were procedures manualized?
  • was compliance by therapists monitored?
  • how many sessions were employed?

27
Who were the therapists?
  • what kind of training?
  • how much experience?
  • how were clients assigned to therapists?

28
Who were the clients?
  • how impaired or severely disturbed?
  • were people with co-morbid conditions excluded?

29
When was outcome measured?
  • at the end of treatment?
  • after a 1-year followup?
  • was maintenance treatment required or allowed?
    what kind?
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