1 / 37

Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy for Psychosis

Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy for Psychosis. Demian Rose, MD, PhD Rachel Loewy, PhD. Why CBT?. 1. Because it provides a model of belief that is easily transferable from depression to psychosis to anxiety and back 2. Because it works!. Prodromal Interventions.

mateo
Download Presentation

Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy for Psychosis

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy for Psychosis Demian Rose, MD, PhD Rachel Loewy, PhD

  2. Why CBT? 1. Because it provides a model of belief that is easily transferable from depression to psychosis to anxiety and back 2. Because it works!

  3. Prodromal Interventions *Statistically significant difference

  4. Early Ideas about Psychotherapy • Freud • Neurosis = ego’s reality-based suppression of the id • Psychosis = ego’s indulgence of the id

  5. Psychosis Myth #1 • Chronic psychosis is a return to a core, primitive level of brain processing • “psychotic process” • “Psychic Swamp”

  6. Corollary to Psychosis Myth #1 • There is no reason to believe that psychotherapy for people suffering from chronic psychosis has to be fundamentally different from psychotherapy for people suffering from other problems. • The myth of “Supportive Therapy” as the psychotherapy for chronic psychosis

  7. An error in information processing(the character of which depends upon the system in question) Psychosis – A Neuroscience Definition:

  8. CBT Basics • Events or other stimuli trigger: • Thoughts, which trigger: • Emotions • all of which leads to…

  9. CBT Basics • Immediate behavioral responses • Schema activations (Schema = cognitive structure that explains patterns of behavior or events) • Eventual behavioral responses (Thought-Emotion-Behavior Loop)

  10. The CBT Loop Thoughts Emotions Behaviors

  11. CBT Therapist Qualities • Develops shared problems and goals • Identifies strengths and realistic plans, timelines • Educates, educates, educates • Actively questions (“dialectic” a.k.a. “Socratic” or “Columbo” method) • Encourages self-discovery • “homework”

  12. Special Considerations • In Psychosis: • Normalize • Psychotic experiences are actually quite common • Psychotic experiences exist along a continuum • Don’t panic! • If therapist is emotionally overwhelmed, client can easily become so as well • Even when you have no idea how to respond to a particular statement, you still have shared experiences and goals – remember them!

  13. The Meat of a Course of CBT • Assessment • Formulation • Discovery and change

  14. CBT Assessment • Examine presenting problems in terms of: • Thoughts and beliefs • Emotion and mood states • Behavioral patterns and goals

  15. CBT Formulation • Utilize the patient’s presenting problems and goals to develop a set of prioritized intervention strategies. • Alliance depends on a shared problem/goal • Re: normalize, don’t panic, focus on outcomes • Client should be explicitly shown the therapist’s thought process (also: homework) • Re: most beliefs and behaviors change slowly • Re: you can model an evidence-based approach to solving everyday problems

  16. The CBT Loop:a model for discovery and change Thoughts Emotions Behaviors

  17. The CBT Loop and Psychosis • In Psychosis, the following approaches are frequently useful: • Generating alternative explanations (thought focus) • Identifying and modifying attentional biases (sensation and emotion focus) • Identifying and modifying safety behaviors (behavioral focus)

  18. The CBT Loop and Psychosis • In Psychosis: • Generate and evaluate alternativeexplanations (these need to be in part client-generated, especially for intrusive thoughts) • Counter evidence? • What if it were someone else with the same belief? • How might someone else explain it? • Has experience ever proved me wrong before? • Is reality shades of grey, instead of black-and-white?

  19. The CBT Loop and Psychosis • In Psychosis: • Work to identify and modify attentional biases • Too much focus on internal experience? • Too much focus on one particular stimulus? • What am I missing? • Work to identify and modify safety behaviors • How do you respond? • What does this response lead to? • How might others respond? • What would happen if you did it differently?

  20. CBT in practice Case examples for discussion

  21. Example: Paranoia and Generating Alternative Explanations

  22. Example: Paranoia and Attentional Bias

  23. Example: Paranoia and Safety Behaviors

  24. Case #1 • M has stopped playing soccer regularly, because when he runs he notices that “my right quadriceps muscle isn’t attached correctly to my right knee and I can feel this flaw whenever I land a hard stride; therefore, my right leg is misshapen” (physical therapy exam and MRI were both negative)

  25. Case #1 …what might be some: • Thoughts and Alternative Explanations? • Emotions/Sensations and Attentional Biases? • Behaviors and Safety Behaviors?

  26. Case #2 • C notes that she can not trust her psychiatrist, because the heater in his office has the phrase “Trap #24” written on it, which suggests that he is part of a conspiracy to hospitalize her against her will.

  27. Case #2 …what might be some: • Thoughts and Alternative Explanations? • Emotions/Sensations and Attentional Biases? • Behaviors and Safety Behaviors?

  28. FIN

  29. Slide graveyard…

  30. Psychosis is not: • One thing • One type of reaction • One type of process • Something “other than” neurosis

  31. What brains share • We are constantly and unconsciously processing information • What if this process went awry? • What would the subjective experience be like?

  32. Distinguishing Novelty • We are novelty seeking organisms • We preferentially attend to novel stimuli • This process is very fast and initially unconscious

  33. Ignoring Redundancy • We are faced with multiple stimuli at any given time • Most of these stimuli are irrelevant to our current state • We filter out redundant information unconsciously

  34. Experiment 1 • Listen • Listen • Listen • Listen • Listen • Listen • Listen

  35. Experiment 1 • Listen • Watch • Learn • Distill • Interpret • Integrate • Repackage

  36. Distinguishing Self from Other • We have a clear boundary • We are constantly processing information both internal and external to that boundary • We therefore “tag” self-generated stimuli

  37. In a sense then… • CBT is a perfect model for psychosis • Hallucinations = lower order errors in information processing (“bottom up”) • Distorted thoughts = higher order errors in information processing (“top down”)

More Related