1165275Therapies JS09
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Transcript 1165275Therapies JS09
PSYCHOLOGY
The Psychological
Therapies
History of Treatment
History of Treatment
Reformers of treatment of the mentally ill:
Dorothy Dix
Philippe Pinel
Treatment depends on:
Therapist view of the problem:
Learned
Biological/genetic
Social conditions
Therapy
Eclectic Approach
an approach to psychotherapy that,
depending on the client’s problems, uses
techniques from various forms of therapy
Therapy
Psychotherapy
an emotionally charged, confiding interaction
between a trained therapist and someone
who suffers from psychological difficulties
TherapyPsychoanalysis
1. Psychoanalysis (Freud)
•
Goal: Method that attempts to gain insight into
unconscious origins of the problem
•
•
Uncover repressed impulses/conflicts
identify cause of behavior
Psychoanalysis
• Freud believed the patient’s free associations,
resistances, dreams, and transferences (and the
therapist’s interpretations of them) released
previously repressed feelings, allowing the patient
to gain self-insight
Therapy- Psychoanalysis
Resistance
• blocking from consciousness of anxiety-laden material
TherapyPsychoanalysis
Transference
the patient’s transfer to the analyst of
emotions linked with other relationships
e.g. love or hatred for a parent
2. Humanistic Therapy
• humanistic therapy developed by Carl Rogers
Client-Centered Therapy
• therapist uses techniques such as active listening
within a genuine, accepting, empathic environment to
facilitate clients’ growth
• Provide psychological Mirror
• Concentrate on present & future
• Look to explain cause
Humanistic Therapy
Active Listening-empathic listening in which the
Therapist/listener echoes, restates, and clarifies
3. Behavior Therapy
Behavior Therapy
Goal: therapy that applies learning principles
to the elimination of unwanted behaviors
Classical conditioning - Pavlov
Operant conditioning - Skinner, Watson
Behavior Therapy
A. Counterconditioning
• procedure that conditions new responses to stimuli
that trigger unwanted behaviors
Includes:
• systematic desensitization
• aversive conditioning
• exposure therapy/flooding
• virtual reality
Behavior Therapy
1. Systematic Desensitization
• type of counterconditioning
• associates a pleasant, relaxed state with gradually
increasing anxiety-triggering stimuli
• Ex. Of Peter with hierarchy of increases
• commonly used to treat phobias
Behavior Therapy
Exposure Therapy / flooding/ virtual reality
treat anxieties by exposing people (in imagination
or reality) to the things they fear and avoid
Behavior Therapy
Systematic Desensitization
Counter conditioning
2. Aversive Conditioning
type of counterconditioning that associates an
unpleasant state with an unwanted
behavior
Reverse/opposite of desensitization
Examples:
nausea ---> alcohol
Stop nail biting by painting nails with terrible
taste polish and stop biting behavior
Behavior Therapy
Aversion
therapy
for
alcoholics
Behavior Therapy
B. Token Economy
an operant conditioning procedure that rewards
desired behavior
patient exchanges a token of some sort, earned for
exhibiting the desired behavior, for various privileges
or treats
4.Cognitive Therapy
Cognitive Therapy
Who: Aaron Beck, Albert Ellis, Adele Rabin
Goal: teaches people new, more adaptive &
constructive ways of thinking and acting
Stress inoculation training
• Discover irrational thinking
• Interpretation of life events in new perspective
• Reverse self defeating thinking
• based on the assumption that thoughts intervene
between events and our emotional reactions
Cognitive Therapy
A cognitive
perspective
on
psychological
disorders
Cognitive Behavior
Therapy
Type of cognitive behavior therapy:
RET (Rational Emotive Therapy)
Albert Ellis
• Help one change their thinking
• Shows them the irrational thinking
• Demonstrates a way change behavior
Therapy
Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy
a popular integrated therapy that combines cognitive
therapy (changing self-defeating thinking) with
behavior therapy (changing behavior)
Group and Family
Therapies
Family Therapy
treats the family as a system
views an individual’s unwanted behaviors as
influenced by or directed at other family members
attempts to guide family members toward positive
relationships and improved communication
Cognitive Therapy
The
Cognitive
Revolution
Cognitive Therapy
Cognitive
therapy for
depression