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Outline The presentation of psychosis The aim of CBT for psychosis Delusions and hallucinations A cognitive model of the positive symptoms of psychosis Developing a formulation Using a formulation in clinical practice The evidence base of CBTp The relationship between trauma and psychosis . Symptoms of Psychosis .
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1. An Introduction to a Formulation Based Approach to CBT for Psychosis16th September 2010 Dr Craig Steel
Charlie Waller Institute of Evidence Based Psychological Treatment
University of Reading
2. OutlineThe presentation of psychosisThe aim of CBT for psychosisDelusions and hallucinationsA cognitive model of the positive symptoms of psychosisDeveloping a formulationUsing a formulation in clinical practice The evidence base of CBTpThe relationship between trauma and psychosis
3. Symptoms of Psychosis Issues of Diagnosis – Schizophrenia
Positive Symptoms
Hallucinations
Delusional beliefs / Paranoia
Disordered thoughts
Negative Symptoms
Focus on positive symptoms
Paranoia and Voices
across disorders
4. Video Clips Implications for Therapy Being ‘stuck’ in a seemingly irrational belief
Need a different way of approaching the topic
Chaotic & distressing experiences
Are they random?
5. How should CBT work Client defined goals
Collaborative approach, therapist not the expert
The clients view is one possible explanation
A formulation helps make sense of a range of problems
Formulation is not fact, it allows the client flexibility to check things out
6. What is aim of CBT for Psychosis ?This Workshop Where Possible: A formulation based approach to help someone understand why they have these distressing experiences or ‘symptoms’
As ever in CBT, the intervention evolves from the formulation
To build upon what you already know about CBT for anxiety and depression
7. LET’S BE REALISTIC Engagement difficulties
Cognitive difficulties and motivation
The evidence base
8. LET’S BE REALISTIC, BUT A seemingly small change can be extremely important
9. Cross sectional formulations
10. Generic Cognitive Model
11. BIG ISSUE
When do I need to use a cross-sectional formulation and when do I need to use a longitudinal one?
12. Level of formulation Severity of the problem
Keep therapy as SIMPLE AS POSSIBLE to achieve goals
Probably won’t know to start with
Inclusion of core belief in a formulation doesn’t mean it becomes a target Example: the four ways in which psychological life are conventionally catagorised reflect the internal workings and psychological state of a person at a particular point in time
For instance changing ones perspective can provide a new outlook that helps dissipate stress, reduce tension, and encourage constructive activity
Meanwhile person is interacting with the external world through a personal, social political and historical context.
TWO Levels of CBT
Therapist may concentrate on identifying and reexamining particular thoughts, thereby changing feelings and behaviours.
Or, they may focus in underlying meanings and beliefs and adopt more sophisticated and complex methods of interventions
Hypothesis testing
Working in an open minded way with a formulation provides a means fro contributing tot eh scientific endeavor involved in finding out which are the best. Most effective and most efficient methods of treatment.
Example: the four ways in which psychological life are conventionally catagorised reflect the internal workings and psychological state of a person at a particular point in time
For instance changing ones perspective can provide a new outlook that helps dissipate stress, reduce tension, and encourage constructive activity
Meanwhile person is interacting with the external world through a personal, social political and historical context.
TWO Levels of CBT
Therapist may concentrate on identifying and reexamining particular thoughts, thereby changing feelings and behaviours.
Or, they may focus in underlying meanings and beliefs and adopt more sophisticated and complex methods of interventions
Hypothesis testing
Working in an open minded way with a formulation provides a means fro contributing tot eh scientific endeavor involved in finding out which are the best. Most effective and most efficient methods of treatment.
13. CBT Issues
CBT should include a developmental ‘story’ explaining why people are biased to think in certain ways
Beliefs are not simply challenged directly as irrational
Relevant to Psychosis
14. What ‘causes’ Psychosis- what might be in a full formulation
Possible Biological Vulnerabilities
Stressful Life Events – trauma , abuse, bullying
Drugs
Having unusual experiences (e.g. voices)
How people make sense of unusual experiences
What keeps it going ?
15. Generic Cognitive Model of Psychosis
16. What ‘causes’ Psychosis- what might be in a full formulation
The assumption here is that these individuals are vulnerable to developing anxiety or depression, and the triggering of unusual experiences as well contributes towards psychosis
17. What do we mean by a Biological Vulnerability?
18. What do we mean by Unusual Experiences?
19. What do we mean by Unusual Experiences?
20. What do we mean by Unusual Experiences?
21. When working with psychosis and beliefs we often end up getting involved in what is real and what is not.Do we need to directly challenge the ‘reality’ of symptoms at any point during therapy?
22. Do we need to directly challenge the ‘reality’ of symptoms at any point during therapy?- there are varied approaches to CBTp- a fear of being too challenging- a fear of collusion
23. Do we need to challenge the ‘reality’ of symptoms ?1. Is it the best way to achieve the aims of therapy?2. What is the aims of therapy?
24. Do we need to challenge the ‘reality’ of symptoms ?3. If the aim is distress reduction, do all ‘psychotic’ symptoms need to be challenged?4. Can people experience ‘psychotic’ symptoms without being distressed
25. Consider psychotic phenomena separatelyDelusions – ParanoiaVoices
26. DELUSIONS / PARANOIA Can people experience ‘delusional beliefs’ without being distressed?
Are there any specific criteria than can be used to reliably distinguish a delusion from a non-delusional belief ?
27. DELUSIONS Are there any specific criteria than can be used to reliably distinguish a delusion from a non-delusional belief ?
A delusion is ‘not-true’
Not amenable to change
28. DELUSIONS Examples of ‘common’ beliefs and/or experiences which are not based on scientific proof
29. DELUSIONS Examples of ‘common’ beliefs and/or experiences which are not based on scientific proof
Astrology
Religion
Aliens
30. Delusions Large polls of the general population such as Kingdon & Turkington (1994) and Garety and Hemsley (1985) found the following beliefs
ghosts 25%
telepathy 25-50%
Peters et al. (1999)
not the content of beliefs that distinguished between delusional patients and new religious movements or the degree of conviction but levels of distress and preoccupation
Questions recovery being based on conviction
31. Delusions They are a form of belief
Influenced by normal belief development and maintenance factors
Scanning
Interpretation bias
32. Underlying beliefs of others are threatening and not to be trusted, recently includes family members
33. Delusions
Bizarre content is not the focus, distress is always the focus
Easy to be ‘distracted’ by bizarre content, and forget empathic engagement
Need to assess why a belief is distressing
34. Conclusion
Delusional type beliefs can be found in the general public, who are not distressed by them
It is the distress which is the focus in therapy
No need to challenge what real, just focus on distress
35. VOICES I Are there any specific criteria than can be used to reliably define an auditory hallucination?
36. VOICES Are there any specific criteria than can be used to reliably define an auditory hallucination, as part of a diagnosis?
Is there a distinction between voices hearing in non-patients and in those diagnosed?
Romme and Escher
37. VOICES So we know many people hear voices and are not distress by them
So getting rid of the voice should not be the target
How do we understand why some voices are distressing?
38. Back to a basic CBT model The aim is to work on the distress caused by the beliefs or interpretation of an event
Hearing a voice is considered an event
The aim is NOT to remove the event/voice
Reduce distress by working with beliefs
39. Back to a basic CBT model A = The Voice
B = (Belief) Voice must be obeyed
C = do what voices say, get distressed
40. Common psychiatric beliefs about voices
They are completely powerful
They know everything
They must be obeyed
They are uncontrollable
They are the Devil/God/CIA/MI5
…. The distress follows from these beliefs
41. An analysis of a voice Voice content
‘Rape and kill, rape and kill!’
42. VOICES CONTENT
Critical
Kill yourself
Cut your wrists
43.
44. Cross-Sectional Formulation Triggers (cannabis, paranoid thoughts, arousal )
Hear Voices
scared, increased arousal pray, hide in church,
no sleep attend to relevant stimuli
It is the devil trying to possess make me harm people
45. Distress and voices
Distress can arise not just from the content and quality of the voice but from the beliefs about the voice
46. VOICES IIWorking therapeutically
47. NORMALISATION
Up to 3% population
Many cope, even see as a benefit
Mixed relationships
Useful information (distraction is hard)
Historical, cultural perspective
HVN magazines (www.hearingvoices.org)
48. VOICE ENGAGEMENT ISSUES
May be active during session, make threats
Client may fear the reaction of therapist
Often think they are alone
Need to keep the affect low - normalise
Aim is not to ‘get rid of’ but work on why they are distressing - content, beliefs
49. Possible Ways of Conceptualising the Origin of Voices 1 : Voices are the product of a chemical imbalance in the brain
2 : Voices are like ‘waking dreams’ and can reflect current concerns in unusual ways like dreams do
3 : Voices are a version of your own thoughts
50. Possible Ways of Conceptualising the Origin of Voices 4 : Voices are communications via telepathy
5 : Voices are communications from God / spirits
6 : Voices happen when people are stressed/take drugs/ don’t sleep
51. Voice Conceptualisations No ‘right’ way to conceptualise voices
Task is not to ‘push’ one conceptualisation onto a client
We do raise possible conceptualisations in the context of a formulation where appropriate
The aim is work on the distress associated with voices
52. What have we covered?
What do we need to cover?
Looked at what might trigger unusual exp
Looked at delusions and voices individually
Looked at maintenance cycles for specific ‘symptoms’
53. What have we covered?
What do we need to cover?
A longitudinal formulation
Allows us to make sense of seemingly unconnected distressing events
54. Longitudinal Formulation
What’s needed?
Enough developmental information to make sense of core beliefs and assumptions
A critical incident (1st episode)
The first unusual experiences
How they were made sense of
What influenced those interpretations
What ‘symptoms’ and other problems are now stuck
What keeps it going
55. Generic Cognitive Model of Psychosis
56. Generic Cognitive Model of Psychosis
57. Longitudinal Formulation
What’s needed?
Evidence that current mood will directly influence unusual experiences
Anxiety increases frequency of voices
Anxiety and depression may influence the content of voices
58. Generic Cognitive Model of Psychosis
59. Generic Cognitive Model of Psychosis
60. Longitudinal Formulation
What’s needed?
To understand what influences how the individual makes sense of these initial confusing and distressing experiences
In psychosis, this tends to be as ‘external’ and ‘threatening’
61. Generic Cognitive Model of Psychosis
62. Longitudinal Formulation
What’s influences how we make sense of things?
Core Beliefs
Isolation
Evidence for ‘jumping to conclusions’
63. Generic Cognitive Model of Psychosis
64. Longitudinal Formulation
When do we call it symptoms?
After a period of stabilisation
When it has been diagnosed at such
This doesn’t make it any different, it is just the history of how it has been labelled in their psychiatric history
65. Generic Cognitive Model of Psychosis
66. Generic Cognitive Model of Psychosis
67. Longitudinal Formulation
What’s influences whether maintenance occurs?
Core Beliefs
Isolation
Continued Drug Use
68. Generic Cognitive Model of Psychosis
69. Generic Cognitive Model of Psychosis
72. JennyJenny believes that other people are always staring at her and saying nasty things about her.Sometimes they say things to each other and sometimes they say things directly to her. Sometimes she thinks she is being watched via the television. She hears voices that other people can’t hear. The voices tell her she is being watched, and say they will hurt her.
74.
75. Engagement Issues Need to offer them a different type of relationship
Engage with what is distressing to the client
Client should feel understood & taken seriously – their view is one possible explanation
View client as reasonable and rational – struggling to understand difficult experiences
76. Engagement Issues Ongoing process
Be flexible with timing and location
77.
79.
81. What else do we need to consider?
Assessment of the client
How to integrate assessment information into a formulation (using the model)
How to turn the formulation into an intervention
82. Assessment (handout) All factors relevant to the model
You are assessing the full history and the whole person, not just the ‘psychosis’
Underlying self/other beliefs
Stress at time of onset
Personal meaning of symptoms
Maintaining factors
83. Assessment (handout) Start with current or past, all information is relevant
As relationship develops, guide the conversation to the areas you have heard less about
84. What else do we need to consider?
Assessment of the client
How to integrate assessment information into a formulation (using the model)
How to turn the formulation into an intervention
85. EXERCISE:CASE VIGNETTE (R)
86. What else do we need to consider?
Assessment of the client
How to integrate assessment information into a formulation (using the model)
How to turn the formulation into an intervention
87. Possible Interventions Developing the formulation
Psychological insight allows increased control
Using it for relapse prevention
Awareness of personal vulnerabilities
Awareness of triggers
Awareness of early signs
88. Possible Interventions CBT for social anxiety
At maintenance level
At core belief level (self-esteem)
Use of behavioural experiments
89. What is aim of CBT for Psychosis ?This Workshop Where Possible: A formulation based approach to help someone understand why they have these distressing experiences or ‘symptoms’
As ever in CBT, the intervention evolves from the formulation
To build upon what you already know about CBT for anxiety and depression
90. What is the aim of the formulation and associated therapy ? Reducing distress
Providing a less threatening interpretation for currently distressing experiences
Provides an alternative to a medical model and all ‘psychotic’ beliefs being true
91. What is the motivation for change? Reducing distress
Motivation to take risks in therapy, to make a change that is desired (their goals)
BUT ….
‘giving up’ old beliefs and ‘being wrong’
Giving up positive aspects of voice hearing and/or paranoia
92. Case Example
Core Beliefs and Paranoia
93. Formulation – ExampleThe role of core beliefs
95. Formulation – ExampleThe role of core beliefs
96. Clinical Cases Paranoia with a direct theme linked to the past
Paranoia with a minimal theme linked to the past
A voices case based on a trauma history
An intervention without a formulation
97. CASE 1
98. Paranoia Case Current Beliefs
Early Life History
Yorkshire, race, care home, London/punk
Trauma
Daughter, prison
Recent Exacerbation
100. Paranoia Case - Interventions Formulation
Paranoia : understandable, protective
Strategy maybe ‘out of date’
Lowers his quality of life
101. Paranoia Case - Interventions Formulation : over 10 sessions
Paranoia: protective but at a price
The red dot incident
The role of safety behaviours : ‘checking it out’
Generating alternatives
Scripts : for current and relapse prevention
102. Paranoia Case - Interventions Situation = someone mentions prison
Thought = they know what I’ve done (fed by ‘core belief’)
Emotion = anxiety / anger
Behaviour = leave the situation / be hypervigilant
103. Paranoia Case - Interventions Generation of other alternatives
Maybe they mentioned prison for a reason not to do with me
Even if they have heard I went to prison, they may also have heard I was innocent
104. Paranoia Case - Interventions FlashCard
I can over-emphasise the chances of danger, and I know why. Is this one of those times ? Just pause for a minute, think, are there any other possibilities for what I’m thinking. Remember the red-pen event.
105. Paranoia Case - Interventions Unrealistic to remove all paranoid thoughts
Attend to what triggers worst moments
Mindfullness
106. CASE 2
107. Case 2 Background
Second episode
Recent beliefs about being spied by TV etc
Felt very threatened by lots of people, increasing
108. Case 2 Attend to the stages covered in developing a formulation
This one has no developmental history
109. Case 2Stages Establish the theme of current concerns
Note – therapist does not focus on the evidence for the current beliefs
110. Case 2Stages Establish the theme of current concerns
Note – therapist does not focus on the evidence for the current beliefs
Establish how this theme is part of a pattern with previous episodes
111. Case 2Stages Establish the theme of current concerns
Note – therapist does not focus on the evidence for the current beliefs
Establish how this theme is part of a pattern with previous episodes
Focus on a relevant event that may have triggered this type of concern
112. Case 2Stages Establish the theme of current concerns
Note – therapist does not focus on the evidence for the current beliefs
Establish how this theme is part of a pattern with previous episodes
Focus on a relevant event that may have triggered this type of concern
Use formulation to suggest an alternative explanation of threatening events
113. What Works for Whom Within CBT for Psychosis Dr Craig Steel
Charlie Waller Institute of Evidence Based Psychological Treatments
University of Reading, UK.
114. Cognitive Behaviour Therapy (CBTp) for schizophrenia: effect sizes, clinical models and methodological rigour
Til Wykes, Institute of Psychiatry, UK.
Craig Steel, University of Reading, UK.
Brian Everitt, Institute of Psychiatry, UK.
Nicholas Tarrier, University of Manchester, UK.
Schizophrenia Bulletin (2008)
115. Cognitive Behaviour Therapy (CBTp) for schizophrenia: effect sizes, clinical models and methodological rigour A comprehensive review of evidence base of CBTp
Considers the outcome in relation to a variety of symptoms
Considers individual and group therapy
Considers the issue of trial quality
CTAM (Tarrier & Wykes, 2004)
116. Inclusion All patients received standard psychiatric care (TAU, treatment as usual)
In the experimental group CBT was an adjunct to treatment as usual (TAU)
There was a control group
There was an allocation procedure
CBT treatment was targeted at one of the following
positive
negative
Functioning
social anxiety
117. Exclusion Non CBT
Uncontrolled
Outcome not based on symptoms
E.g. Medication compliance
118. Clinical Trials 34 Trials Included
1978 and 1993 to 2006
23 from 2000 onwards
27 Individual and 7 Group
20 UK based
25 chronic participants
24 Individual CBTp aimed at positive symptoms
120. Individual vs Group CBTp
Individual (N = 27) 0.415 (SE 0.08)
Group (N=7) 0.386 (SE 0.20).
122. NICE Guideline
At least 16 sessions
At least 6 months
123. Trauma and Psychosis
124. Trauma and Psychosis Potential Psychological Relationships
Impact of ‘core beliefs’ during development
Co-morbid diagnosis of PTSD and psychosis
Psychotic symptoms may constitute a traumatic event
Traumatic event may be a ‘stress’ trigger for psychosis
Flashbacks or intrusions may be appraised in a ‘psychotic’ manner
125. Developmental trauma That is, childhood trauma, bullying, abuse etc.
How does this relate to psychosis, it is prior to onset.
Impact on the vulnerabilities
Cognitive vulnerabilities: ‘core’ beliefs
126. Developmental trauma Negative beliefs about self, world and others often associated with psychosis
I am bad
Others should not be trusted
Not exclusive to psychosis, but become relevant when some unusual experiences occur.
129. Intrusions
131. Intrusions & ‘hotspots’ PTSD intrusions commonly of the worst moments of a trauma (Grey, Young & Holmes, 2002)
May be more than one hotspot in a trauma
Hotspots associated with a range of emotions - not just fear e.g guilt, shame, anger
132. Grey, Holmes & Brewin (2001)example
133. Relevant Research Morrison : ‘culturally unacceptable interpretations’ of intrusive phenomena
Steel: those vulnerable to the development of psychosis are also more vulnerable to more frequent intrusive experiences after a stressful event
The role of unusual beliefs as a vulnerability factor and relevant to interpretation
134. CASE 3
135. Jane
Paranoia
wars
local children
bombs
Voices
variable in content
threatening , abusive
controlling
136. Jane
CSA, generally controlled (Early life events)
I am a bad/worthless person, I deserve punishment
Other people are not to be trusted
Onset at 2nd Pregnancy
Beliefs about voices
From God
Powerful
Can punish her
138. Jane
Current voices assessed (normalisation)
Reference to difficult childhood
Abuse discussed – briefly
Discussion of similarity of content of voice and her reaction to it c.f. childhood
Work in integrating an adult relationship within the voice reaction
139. Jane
Voices not as powerful
Less sure voices from God
Able to ‘pity’ the voices
140. Jane Situation = CPN away
Thought = on purpose, she hates me (fed by ‘core belief’)
Emotion = sadness
Behaviour = leave, don’t contact CMHT
141. CASE 4
142. Gary 35 year history of voices, visions, paranoia.
Intense periods of distress, but religious experiences also form a major part of his life
Potential for a formulation originating from first voice hearing experience at a party
Intervention was talking & sleep advice
143. End