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Treatment of Disorders

Treatment of Disorders. History of Treatment. Ethical Issues in Treatment. Deinstitutionalization occurred during the mental health movement of the 1960s Don’t exclude mentally ill from society, but help them function within society

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Treatment of Disorders

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  1. Treatment of Disorders

  2. History of Treatment

  3. Ethical Issues in Treatment • Deinstitutionalization occurred during the mental health movement of the 1960s • Don’t exclude mentally ill from society, but help them function within society • Shorten in-patient treatment (only keep in hospital if necessary) • More out-patient care • APA guidelines 

  4. Who Provides Treatment? • Psychiatrists – Medical doctors, MD • Psychologists – PhD, PsyD, some MA • Clinical Social Workers, MA • Marriage/Family Therapists, MA • Licensed Professional Counselors, MA • Psychiatric Nurses, RN • Substance Abuse Counselors, CADC • Pastoral Counselors

  5. Psychotherapy – trained therapist uses psychological techniques to help someone to overcome problems or difficulties • Biomedical therapy – prescribed medication that acts on nervous system • Eclectic approach – use a blend of therapies and approaches

  6. Psychoanalysis • Aim of treatment is to make client aware of their unconscious & resolve unconscious childhood conflicts

  7. Psychoanalysis • Free association • Say whatever comes to mind, no censoring of thoughts • Overcome resistance (blocking of anxiety-laden material) • Transference • Patient transfers unconscious hostilities or attraction to therapist

  8. Psychodynamic • Causes: childhood experiences and unconscious forces • Does not emphasize sexual development • Aim = enhance insight by exploring feelings & thoughts • Psychodynamic therapist interprets and analyzes the patient • Interpersonal therapy – brief (12-16 session) treatment, effective for depression

  9. Client-Centered Therapy (Carl Rogers) • Causes = barriers to self-understanding, lack of self-acceptance • Focuses on patient’s conscious self-perceptions without judgment • Genuineness, acceptance, empathy • Nondirective therapy  Active listening • Echo, clarify, and reflect what patient has said • Unconditional positive regard  total acceptance of client

  10. Psychoanalysis v. Humanistic • Humanistic therapies differ from psychoanalysts in focusing on… 1) Present & future (not past) 2) Conscious rather than unconscious 3) Immediate responsibility 4) Promoting growth instead of curing illness

  11. Behavior Therapies – Classical Conditioning • Disorders caused by learning or observing maladaptive behaviors/responses • Aim of treatment is to replace maladaptive behaviors/responses with desirable ones

  12. Behavior Therapies – Classical Conditioning • Counterconditioning • Pair feared stimulus w/good stimulus • Exposure therapy • Learn relaxation techniques • Systematic desensitization =hierarchy of feared stimulus • Aversive conditioning • Pair the undesirable behavior with bad response

  13. Behavior Therapy • Systematic Desensitization

  14. Behavior Therapy • Aversion therapy for alcoholics

  15. Behavior Therapies – Operant Behavior Modification – reinforcement & punishment Token Economy

  16. Cognitive Therapies • Cause = irrational thinking patterns or incorrect perceptions of the world • Aim = correct habitual thinking errors • Aaron Beck’s Cognitive(-Behavioral) Therapy  Cognitive Triad 1) Negative feelings about self “I am a failure” 2) Negative feelings about world “The world is unfair” 3) Negative feelings about future “The future is hopeless, it will never get better”

  17. Beck’s Cognitive Therapy for Depression • Over-generalization  drawing general conclusions from a single (usually negative) event. E.g. thinking that failing to be promoted at work means a promotion will never come. • Minimalization and Maximization  Getting things out of perspective: e.g. either grossly underestimating own performance or overestimating the importance of a negative event. • Dichotomous thinking  Thinking that everything is either very good or very bad so that there are no gray areas. In reality, of course, life is one big gray area. http://www.spring.org.uk/2007/02/revolutionary-treatment-of-depression.php

  18. Cognitive-Behavioral Therapies Albert Ellis’s Rational Emotive Behavior Therapy (REBT) - It is not the events but our beliefs about the events that cause harm The A-B-C model A= Adversity (anticipating event) B = Belief about “A” C = Consequences (behavioral, emotional)

  19. Group & Family Therapies

  20. Evaluating Psychotherapies • To whom do people turn for help for psychological difficulties?

  21. Is Psychotherapy Effective? • Overestimation • Clients enter in crisis (temporary) • Want to believe it was worth the effort • Placebo effect • Regression toward the mean (the usual state is better than rock bottom)

  22. Is Psychotherapy Effective? • Those not treated often improve, but those undergoing therapy are more likely to improve • No one therapy is best in all cases • Evidence-based practice – clinical decision making that integrates best available research w/clinical expertise and patient characteristics

  23. Three Benefits of Psychotherapies • Offer expectation that things can and will get better • Offers plausible explanation for symptoms and alternative way of thinking • Effective therapists are empathetic and seek to understand  builds trust

  24. Number of persons Average untreated person Average psychotherapy client Poor outcome Good outcome 80% of untreated people have poorer outcomes than average treated person Evaluating Psychotherapies

  25. Biomedical Therapies • Psychopharmacology = study of drug effects on mind and behavior

  26. Antipsychotic Drugs • Work by decreasing receptiveness to irrelevant stimuli, block dopamine • Treats schizoprhenia, sometimes bipolar • Thorazine, Haldol, neuroleptics • Atypical antipsychotics (Clozapine) • Tardivedyskinesia – involuntary movements of face, tongue, limbs

  27. Antianxiety Drugs • Work by depressing CNS activity (tranquilizers – benzodiazepines), boost GABA • Boost GABA • Xanax, Ativan, D-cycloserine • Can lead to psychological and physiological dependence • Treats anxiety disorders (PTSD, OCD)

  28. Antidepressant Drugs • Work by increasing serotonin &/or norepinephrine • Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitors (SSRIs) • Prozac, Zoloft, Paxil • Block reabsorptionof serotonin from synapse • Treat depression, some anxiety disorders (OCD) • Tricyclics are more effective (serotonin & norepinephrine)

  29. Lithium • Mood stabilizer used to treat bipolar disorder • Lowers risk of suicide

  30. Brain Stimulation Techniques • Electroconvulsive Therapy (ECT) • Severely depressed patients • Electric current sent through brain to produce seizure • Repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) • Patient is awake • Painless magnetic field through skull to brain • Less side effects

  31. Psychosurgery • Removes or destroys brain tissue to change behavior • Lobotomy • ONLY USED IN EXTREME CASES

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