Title: Chapter 17 - Therapy Reading Map
1Chapter 17 - TherapyReading Map
- Monday, April 13- AP Exam 1 in-class (No
pre-test copy) - Tuesday, April 14- 659-669 Students have
tonight to examine AP Exam 1 - Wednesday, April 15- 669-674
- Thursday, April 16- Parent/Teacher Conferences-
No Class - Friday, April 17- 2 Essays in-class (No advance
notice) and peer marking with rubrics on the
weekend.
2Chapter 17 - TherapyReading Map
- Monday, April 20- 674-685 (peer-marked essays
due) - Tuesday, April 21- 685-695
- Wednesday, April 22- Quiz/Cards/Study Guides
3Historical Perspective (659)
- Old Methods
- Holes in head
- Warm baths
- Bleeding
- Beating the devil out
- New Methods
- Philippe Pinel (France) and Dorothea Dix (USA)
saw mental disorders as DISEASES and treatable in
HOSPITALS
4Two Main Perspectives (659)
- Psychological Therapies
- 2. Biomedical Therapies
5The Psychological Therapies (660)
- are built on 4 main theories
- Psychoanalytic
- Humanistic
- Behavioral
- Cognitive
- Note - the Eclectic Approach - uses a blend of
therapies
6Psychoanalysis (660)
- Aims
- to bring repressed impulses and conflicts from
childhood into consciousness where the patient
can deal with them - gets patient to release the energy they
previously devoted to the Id-Ego-Superego
conflicts
7Psychoanalysis Methods (661)
- Free Association
- Resistance
- Dream Analysis
- Transference
8Psychoanalysis Methods (661)Free Association
- the patient retells his past, moment by moment,
as it occurs to him without editing or censoring. - Therapist mainly just listens for what is being
said and not said
9Psychoanalysis Methods (661)Resistance
- the therapist listens for resistance - blocks in
the free flow of the patients talking - Resistance gives the therapist an opportunity to
interpret what repressed ideas are causing the
resistance.
10Psychoanalysis Methods (661)Dream Analysis
- used to uncover the latent (hidden) content of
the patient's manifest (remembered) dreams. - The latent dream reveals repressed ideas.
11Psychoanalysis Methods (661)Transference
- the patient will transfer strong feelings from
his earlier relationships onto the therapist - The patient blames the therapists - but this is
a good step in the therapy - this is another way for repressed ideas to be
discovered
12Current Psychodynamic Therapy (662)
- try to understand a patient's current symptoms by
exploring childhood experiences. - probe for repressed information
- face-to-face therapy has replaced the couch
13Interpersonal Therapy (662)
- an alternative to psychodynamic therapy
- focuses on current relationships rather than
childhood and assists people to improve their
current relationship skills
14Humanistic Therapies (663)
- emphasizes humans inherent potential for
self-fulfillment - aims to boost self-fulfillment by helping people
grow in self-awareness and self-acceptance - Focuses on
- the present and future rather than the past
(childhood) - conscious rather than the unconscious
- taking responsibility for your feelings/actions
rather than uncovering hidden reasons - growth rather than curing illness
15Humanistic Therapies (663)Carl Rogers
Client-Centered Therapy
- focus on client's conscious self perceptions
rather than the therapist's interpretations - non-directive therapy where the therapist
refrains from directing the client towards
certain insights - therapist shows acceptance, genuineness and
empathy to allow client to feel unconditionally
accepted and deepening their self-understanding
and self-acceptance - used active listening (echoing/restating/
seeking clarification/acknowledging expressed
feelings) to give client unconditional positive
regard.
16Behavior Therapies (665)
- Unlike the psychoanalysts and humanists, the
behavior therapists doubt the healing power of
self-awareness. - they assume that the problem behaviors ARE the
problem - they apply learning principles to eliminate
unwanted behaviors (rather than look for the
cause of the behavior) - they replace maladaptive behavior with
constructive behaviors
17Behavior Therapies (665)Classical Conditioning
Techniques
- assumes that we learn behavior and emotion and
therefore we can "unlearn" behavior and emotion - O.H. Mowrer - uses classical condition to cure
bed wetters - a liquid sensitive pad sounds an
alarm waking the child - the child learns to
associate a relaxed bladder with waking up -
18Behavior Therapies (665)Counter-Conditioning
- pair a trigger stimulus (ie small space) with a
NEW response that is incompatible with fear (ie
relaxation). The relaxation then displaces the
old response of fear to the stimulus. - 2 Types of Counter-Conditioning
- 1. Systematic Desensitization
- 2. Aversive Conditioning
19Counter-ConditioningSystematic Desensitization
Therapies
- replace a fear response with a response that is
incompatible with fear - the theory is that you
cannot be relaxed and fearful at the same time -
the relaxation will eventually displace the fear - Mary Jones used a technique of having a child eat
close to a rat that it feared - eventually the
pleasure associated with the eating displaced the
fear response to the rat
20Counter-ConditioningSystematic Desensitization
Therapies
- Joseph Wolpe used a method called Exposure
Therapy - people are over-exposed to a fearful
stimulus and eventually they become habituated to
the stimulus - Progressive Relaxation - you relax one muscle
group at a time until you achieve a drowsy state
of relaxation and comfort - then the therapist
has you imagine a mildly anxiety-arousing
situation - this imagined scene is paired with
your state of relaxation until you no longer feel
the anxiety.
21Counter-ConditioningSystematic Desensitization
Therapies
- Anxiety Hierarchies - as you are in your relaxed
state you imagine "worse" situations and then you
eventually experience actual anxiety causing
situation. - Virtual-Reality Exposure Therapy - client wears
goggles that give them a 3D image of what they
fear (ie flying)
22Counter-ConditioningAversive Conditioning (667)
- the therapist tries to replace a positive
response to a harmful stimulus (ie alcohol) with
a negative/aversive response. (The therapist
will put a nausea drug in the alcohol) - Note - for alcohol treatment only 33 of clients
are still booze-free after 3 years using this
method
23Counter-Conditioning
- Systematic Desensitization
-
- pair a stimulus (elevator) with a new response
(relaxation) that is incompatible with
anxiety
- Aversive Conditioning
-
- Replace a positive response to a harmful
stimulus (alcohol) with a negative response
(nausea)
24Behavior Therapies (668)Operant Conditioning
- voluntary behaviors are strongly influenced by
consequences (reward and punishments) - operant conditioning is used to deal with
specific behaviors - token economy - used in institutions - exchange
tokens for concrete rewards
25Ideas
- The only normal people are the ones that you
dont know very well. Alfred Adler - Follow your heart but take your brain with you.
Alfred Adler - Except our own thoughts, there is nothing
absolutely in our power. Rene Descartes
26Critics of Behavior Modification (668)
- will the behavior stop when the reward stops?
- The behaviorists say that you can wean people off
of the rewards and move towards more intrinsic
rewards - is it ethical to control another's behavior with
reward/punishment? - The behaviorists say that behavior will always be
"controlled" so we may as well control it for the
"good"
27Cognitive Therapies (669)
- behavior therapy is good for treating specific
fears and behaviors. - when the client's fear/anxiety is less clearly
defined, cognitive therapy is useful - assumes that our thinking colours our feelings
- aims to teach people new, more positive ways of
thinking
28Cognitive Therapy for Depression (670)
- reverse client's catastrophic beliefs
- teach clients to view life differently and
discover their irrationalities (Aaron Beck -
therapist) - depressed people don't exhibit the self-serving
bias common in healthy people - depressed people attribute their failures to
themselves and their successes to external
circumstances - Adele Rabin (therapist) has clients record a
day's positive events and their contribution to
each event
29Cognitive-Behavior Therapy (671)
- an integrated therapy that seeks to teach
positive thinking and also alter behaviors - ie - OCD patients are taught to re-label their
compulsions. Instead of hand washing they force
themselves to take a walk and they acknowledge
and label the hand washing as an irrational urge.
30Stress Inoculation Training
- trains people to restructure your thinking in
stressful situations - self-talk - "relax - if the exam is hard it is
hard for everyone. You studied and will do
well." - you are trained to dispute your negative
thoughts.
31Groups and Family Therapy (672)
- saves time and money
- all but traditional psychoanalysis can be done in
a group setting - often used for family conflict
- group context allows people to discover that
others share their problems - allows people to try out new ways of behaving
- ex. AA 12 step program
32Evaluating Psychotherapies (674)Clients
Perspective
- 3 out of 4 are satisfied with the effectiveness
- However, the critics of psychotherapy say
- people enter therapy in crisis and then attribute
normal improvement (that would have happened
anyway) to therapy - client's spend time/money on therapy therefore
they "need" to believe that therapy is effective - clients like their therapists so they find
something positive about the therapy - selective/biased recall by clients
33Joan McCord Study
- 500 boys aged 5 to 13 headed for delinquency
- half were put into counseling and the control
group was not. - 30 years later although the counseled group
attributed their success to the counseling, there
was not a statistically significant difference
between the 2 groups - in fact - in second crime,
alcoholic tendencies, death rate and job
satisfaction, the control group actually had
fewer problems
34Evaluating PsychotherapiesClinicians
Perceptions (675)
- Clients over-estimate problems when entering
therapy, over-emphasize their well being when
leaving therapy and stay in touch only if
satisfied - therapists are more aware of other therapists'
failures - clients find a new therapist if their problems
reoccur
35Outcome Research (676)
- Hans Eysenck (1952) found that
- 2/3rds of people suffering non-psychotic
disorders improved markedly after psychotherapy - HOWEVER
- 2/3rds of untreated people with non-psychotic
disorders also improved
36Outcome Research
- Today meta-analysis (statistically combining the
results of many different studies as if they had
come from one huge study with thousands of
participants) is finding - the average therapy patient ends up better off
than 80 of the untreated individuals - depression is better improved with treatment
- psychotherapy is more effective than medical
therapy - therapy is most effective for clear-cut, specific
problems (ie phobia) - depression and anxiety therapy works in the short
term but relapses frequently occur - chronic schizophrenia is rarely helped by
psychotherapy alone
37Regression Toward the Mean (676)
- the tendency for unusual events or emotions to
return to a more average state on their own
38Placebo Effect (676)
- the belief in a treatment will cause the
treatment to succeed - therefore what ever we doing following a "low"
will be perceived as an improvement - we are
naturally regressing to the mean (back to normal)
but in comparison to the low - normal is an
improvement - SO, when we evaluate whether a therapy is
effective we must ask whether the improvement
that follows a therapy exceeds what we could
expect from the placebo effect and the regression
toward the mean effect.
39The Relative Effectiveness of Different
Therapies p. 678Mary Smith's meta-analysis
reveals
Disorder Best Therapy
Depression Cognitive, interpersonal and behavior
Anxiety Cognitive, exposure and stress inoculation
Bulimia Cognitive-behavioral
Bed Wetting Behavior modification
Phobia/OCD Behavioral conditioning
Sex Disorders Behavioral conditioning
40Therapeutic Touch (680)
- popular alternate therapy
- hands move a few inches from your body and push
energy fields into balance - used for headaches to cancer
- Rosa (1998) - using 9 year old Emily doing
research for a science fair - therapists could
not tell whether they were close to Emily's hand
more than 47 of the time (less than chance odds)
41Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing
(680)
- Francine Shapiro discovered that anxious thoughts
vanished as her eyes spontaneously darted about.
She developed a technique where she treats
anxiety patients by triggering eye movement as
they recall traumatic memories. - 40,000 health professionals now trained in this
method - critics say this is just exposure therapy in a
safe context (in trials patients had the same
results with and without the eye movement)
42Light Exposure Therapy (681)
- Seasonal Affective Disorder - a form of
wintertime depression - treated with doses of intense light
- the light affects our circadian clock - morning
light exposure decreases the hormone melatonin.
In evening darkness increases melatonin. - controlled trials show a difference in
effectiveness between using morning light,
evening light and placebo - morning light is best
43Commonalities Among Psychotherapies (682)
- All therapies offer at least 3 benefits
- 1. hope for demoralized people
- 2. a new perspective on yourself and the world
- 3. empathetic, trusting, caring relationships
- These 3 things are also offered by self-help
groups, support groups, traditional healers,
elders, etc.
44Culture and Values in Psychotherapy (683)
- Clients often adopt their therapist's values.
- Do the patient's and therapist's religious
beliefs affect the therapy? - Albert Ellis (1980) - a therapist that says "no
one and nothing is supreme. Self-gratification
should be encouraged, unequivocal love,
commitment, service and fidelity, especially
marriage, leads to harmful consequences. - Bergin (1980) - says "because God is supreme,
humility and the acceptance of divine authority
are virtues. Self-control and commitment, love
and self-sacrifice are to be encouraged.
Infidelity to any personal commitment, especially
marriage, leads to harmful consequences."
45Cultural Differences
- North America, Europe, Australia - individualism
is reflected by the therapists - Asia - more collectivist
- Training in cultural sensitivity for therapists
becomes important given the different types of
societies.
46The Biomedical Therapies (685)
- Drugs
- Electroconvulsive therapy
- Surgery
47Biomedical TherapyDrug Therapy (685)
- most common biomedical therapy
- introduced in the 1950's
- reduced hospitalizations and surgeries
- Psychopharmacology - the study of drug effects on
the mind and behavior - Double Blind - is important technique to reduce
placebo effect and the regression to the mean
effect
48Antipsychotic Drugs (686)
- accidental discovery that certain drugs used for
other medical purposes calmed psychotic patients - antipsychotic drugs mimic dopamine and occupy its
receptor sites and block its activity - Chlorpromazine (thorazine) - used with
schizophrenic patients with positive symptoms
(thought to be caused by too much dopamine) - Note that thorazine can have the side effect of
tremors/twitches similar to Parkinsons (which is
caused by too little dopamine) - Clozapine - used with schizophrenic patients with
negative symptoms
49Antianxiety Drugs (687)
- ex. alcohol - valium - xanax
- depress central nervous system activity
- help people cope with fear and anxiety
- dependency on drug and on withdrawal issues
- critics say the drugs reduce symptoms without
resolving underlying problems
50Antidepressant Drugs (687)
- increase norepinephrine and seratonin which
elevate mood and arousal - ex. Prozac partially blocks the reuptake of
seratonin - - Prozac takes about 4 weeks for relief of symptoms
- why - increased seratonin promotes growth of
new brain cells
51Antidepressant Drugs
- drug therapy is often combined with cognitive
therapy and exercise - placebos that mimic the real drug's side effects
are nearly as effective as the actual drug in
double-blind trials - Prozac does not result in an elevated rate of
suicide although their are individual anecdotes
of users of Prozac committing suicide - Lithium - used for bipolar patients
52Electroconvulsive Therapy (689)
- shock treatment - introduced in 1938
- electricity produces convulsions and brief
unconsciousness - used for severe depression that does not respond
to drugs - some memory loss is a side effect
- How does it work?????? We don't know!!!!!
- maybe it causes release of norepinephrine???
- maybe it calms brain area where over-activity
would cause depression????? - ECT treated patients often have relapses of
depression - http//www.youtube.com/watch?vzYl13Relzbs
53Some Gentler Alternatives
- Vagus Nerve stimulation - chest implant
intermittently stimulates the vagus nerve which
sends impulses to the limbic system. Video clip
http//www.youtube.com/watch?vG7uu1dcc-qofeature
related - Repetitive Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation -
magnetic coil held close to the skull above the
right eye - energizes the left frontal lobe -
produces no seizures or memory loss and shows 50
improvement in trials of depressed patients
54Psychosurgery (690)
- least commonly used
- 1930's - Egas Moniz developed the lobotomy (won
the Nobel prize) - sever nerves connecting
frontal lobe with the emotion-controlling centres
of the inner brain - used to calm uncontrollably emotional and violent
patients - hammer an ice-pick like instrument through each
eye socket and wiggle it to sever connections to
the frontal lobe - lobotomies - effects - permanent lethargic,
immature, impulsive personality - today lobotomies are almost never performed
- today psychosurgery used for extreme seizures and
excessive OCD patients
55Prevention (690)
- deal with poverty, work issues, racism, sexism to
prevent psychological disorders - keep our bodies healthy
- mind body connection