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Cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT) for psychosis in 2005 . CBT for psychosis in 2005 is relatively new and developingCBT for neurotic disorders have already been extensively developed, studied, improved and used in the mainstreamPsychological interventions in psychosis have been slower to developIn 2005 CBT for psychosis aims to enhance outcome alongside medical interventions .
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1. Cognitive behavioural therapy for psychosis in 2005Ben Smith, D.Clin.Psy.Research Clinical Psychologist Department of Mental Health Sciences
University College London
Psychological Therapies in the Mainstream Swansea 10th June 2005
3. Psychotic symptoms and cognitive behavioural theory Delusions are erroneous beliefs involving a mis-interpretation of perceptions or experiences; hallucinations are distortions of perception (DSM-IV-TR; 2000)
Perceptions, distortions and interpretations are therefore central to the positive symptoms of psychosis
Cognitive behavioural theory emphasises the role of mis-perception and mis-interpretation in the development and maintenance of all psychological disorders
4. Cognitive behavioural therapy for psychosis in 2005 Theoretically CBT and psychosis should match
Despite this CBT for psychosis is new and still developing
In the NHS in 2005 CBT for psychosis remains largely unavailable
British research groups continue to make important theoretical and therapeutic advances
5. Cognitive theoretical advances in psychosis In the last 5 years theoretical models have started to provide a framework upon which CBT for psychosis can develop
Garety et al (2001) and Morrison (2001) proposed multi-factorial cognitive models of positive psychotic symptoms
The theoretical understanding of the negative symptoms of psychosis (from a cognitive perspective) remains poor
7. Morrison (2001) - An integrative cognitive approach to hallucinations and delusions Positive symptoms are conceptualised as intrusions into awareness (e.g. hallucinations) and culturally unacceptable interpretations of these intrusions (e.g. delusions)
The interpretation, rather than simply the intrusion, causes distress and disability
Symptoms are maintained by mood, arousal and mal-adaptive cognitive-behavioural responses (e.g. avoidance)
8. Theory-practice links in CBT for psychosis Theoretical models guide the development of idiosyncratic case conceptualisation and treatment in CBT for psychosis
Theories have allowed clinicians to make sense of often complicated and confusing symptoms
CBT for psychosis in 2005 is therefore theory (rather than technique) driven
This parallels CBT for other disorders where treatment is clearly theory driven (e.g. PTSD - Ehlers and Clark, 2000)
9. Over-arching aims of CBT for psychosis To reduce the distress and disability caused by symptoms
To improve understanding and self-management
To reduce the risk of further relapse
To improve mood and self-esteem
To involve the client as an active participant in treatment
10. Therapeutic style in CBT for psychosis Engagement is a pre-requisite of successful CBT for psychosis (experiences of stigmatisation are common)
Interventions are characterised by collaborative empiricism and guided discovery
Therapists must be open-minded, validating & normalising
Flexibility in location and length of sessions is important
11. Therapeutic style in CBT for psychosis - II Collaboration is essential for good outcome
Examples of a collaborative approach….
‘What shall we try to do about this then?’
‘What do you think is best?’
‘What are our options?’
‘So, what are we saying here?’
‘What does that tell us then?’
12. Tasks for therapist & client - Formulation Collaboratively construct a model that makes symptoms and distress understandable and explainable
Develop an alternative, non-psychotic model of experiences that is acceptable and non-stigmatising
Develop a plausible ‘biases-in-psychological-processing’ explanation of experiences
Connect up seemingly unconnected factors - beliefs, life events, emotions, thoughts, behaviours and symptoms
13. Tasks for therapist & client - Cognition Identify, understand and analyse key cognitions such as…..
‘These voices are uncontrollable’
‘My illness is uncontrollable, the medication is pointless’
‘Schizophrenia means I have a lifetime of illness ahead’
‘All this mental torture is coming from others - not me’
14. Tasks for therapist & client - Cognition II Challenging negative beliefs about the controllability of illness/symptoms improves outcome in non-psychiatric conditions (e.g. Petrie, 2002)
55% of patients with a chronic psychotic illness are not adherent with their medication (Fenton et al, 1997)
Cognitions about the controllability and treatability of psychotic symptoms can impact not only on mood and symptoms but on behaviour (e.g. medication adherence)
15. How can we achieve this cognitive change? The formulation is the focal point for all change
Normalise the psychotic experience (you are not alone)
Learn that steps can be taken to reduce the likelihood of relapse and chronicity, distress and disability
Learn that having a psychotic illness does not necessarily equate to a lifetime of illness
16. How can we achieve this cognitive change? II Develop psychological insight (e.g. ‘At least some of this mental torture is to do with me and how I am coping’)
Gather information about how others cope (engender hope) Hearing Voices Network (HVN) - voices are common, understandable and not ‘mad’
Information can change your mind (e.g. ‘Suspiciousness is ubiquitous, normal and sometimes useful’; Freeman et al, 2005)
Make predictions, test them out, review the prediction (e.g. ‘I can trust no-one’)
17. Tasks for therapist & client - Behavioural Address and reduce ‘safety behaviours’ - strategies that are used to prevent harm (e.g. avoidance) but in fact serve to maintain beliefs (fearful predictions) and symptoms
Engender self-control and empowerment (mood improves)
Learn from behavioural change - ‘There is something I can do that helps. It isn’t all uncontrollable’
Focus on family and social contexts
18. Is there an evidence base for CBT psychosis? NICE schizophrenia guidelines (2002) - based on rigorous meta-analysis of ‘high-quality’ RCTs
NICE (2002) - ‘Psychological interventions should play a key role in the treatment of schizophrenia. The best evidence is for CBT and Family Intervention (FI)’
NICE guidelines now explicitly recommend CBT be offered as a treatment option
19. Is there evidence for CBT psychosis? - II The most convincing evidence is for symptom and distress reduction especially at follow-up in persistent symptom groups (e.g. Tarrier et al, 1998; Sensky et al, 2000)
Individual CBT and longer interventions (>6 months)
Only limited evidence of improvements in mood, relapse, social-functioning and self-esteem
Evidence in early intervention is encouraging (e.g. Lewis et al, 2002; Morrison et al, 2004)
20. Has our enthusiasm for CBT for psychosis clouded our judgement of the evidence? CBT trials cannot be double-blind placebo trials
Effect sizes are small and not all results are significant
Turkington & McKenna (2003) BJPsych, 182, 477-479
CBT works for some people some of the time
Theory, therapy and evidence are still evolving
21. Ongoing research - The PRP trial PRP - Prevention of Relapse in Psychosis
The PRP trial aims to investigate and intervene in relapse from a psychological perspective
Birchwood (2000) - up to 80% relapse over 5 years
Relapse can be seen as ‘toxic’ - loss of social role, social network and hope, with increases in low-mood and stigma
22. The PRP trial - design and methodology Grantholders: Philippa Garety, Elizabeth Kuipers, Paul Bebbington, David Fowler and Graham Dunn
Research Co-ordinator: Daniel Freeman
5 Research Clinical Psychologists; 10 Research Workers
A multi-centre RCT with (N=301) participants
23. The PRP trial - design and methodology II Independent randomisation to CBT, FI or TAU
Blind assessments
Manualised interventions (audiotaped for adherence)
All baseline assessments completed July 2004
Interventions end July 2005
Final follow-up assessment July 2006
Results available in 2007
24. The PRP trial - aims and objectives To compare CBT with routine treatment for reducing relapse and symptoms
To compare CBT and FI on a range of outcomes
To investigate mechanisms of change in CBT and FI
To inform and test a cognitive model of the positive symptoms of psychosis (Garety et al, 2001)
25. Dissemination of CBT psychosis in the NHS What are the determinants of a successful dissemination?
Continuing to develop a therapy that works
Political will
Funding
Time and resources
Training skilled mental health professionals (e.g. SLAM)
26. Future directions for CBT in psychosis Exactly how does CBT work in psychosis and what works for whom? - (psychosis is heterogeneous)
Within anxiety disorders there are specific CBT treatments for specific problems - would this work in psychosis?
Theory and therapy need to be mutually enhancing
Keep an open mind……..