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Chapter 17 Outcomes and Issues in Psychological Intervention

Chapter 17 Outcomes and Issues in Psychological Intervention. Ch 17. Therapy Evaluation. Evaluation of therapy assumes that one can determine the specific procedures that are used in the therapy

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Chapter 17 Outcomes and Issues in Psychological Intervention

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  1. Chapter 17 Outcomes and Issues in Psychological Intervention Ch 17

  2. Therapy Evaluation • Evaluation of therapy assumes that one can determine the specific procedures that are used in the therapy • How therapy is conducted in practice can be different than what is specified in a therapy manual • Randomized controlled trials (RCTs) vs. idiographic analysis of a single clinical case, or replicated cases • Efficacy refers to how well a therapy does in a controlled clinical trial (i.e., an RCT) • Effectiveness refers to how well a therapy does in the real world of practice Ch 17.1

  3. Problems associated with clinical trials • The use of therapy manuals in psychotherapy research help to standardize treatment. • Increase internal validity • However, reliance on therapy manuals in clinical trials may reduce external validity of results. • Therapy as actually practiced outside of clinical trials is typically less standardized and often much more eclectic. • Adherence to therapy manuals also intended to control differences among therapists. • These differences in therapist variables (e.g., empathy, warmth, openness) play an important role in therapeutic change process. • The role of therapist variables in clinical trials deserves greater attention.

  4. Limitations of Clinical Trials • Volunteer participants are likely different from general public. • Will results from clinical trials based on these participants generalize to other groups of patients? • Use of DSM diagnostic categories to create homogeneous groups may blur differences between participants in groups. • Is there room for idiographic analysis of individuals in clinical trials?

  5. The Challenge of Managed Care • Managed care organizations (contracting with employers) demand accountability from providers (MD and non-MD clinicians) • Evaluations of psychotherapy outcomes are not merely of academic research interest, but have practical implications for people in their daily lives. • Providers are concerned about the potential for abuse of patients’ privacy and denial of needed treatments • Stepped Care: Beginning with the least intrusive, least expensive level of care, and moving up only when necessary. (Question: Does this increase drop out risk compared to the initial use of the most powerful intervention? B&N, 9th edition, pp. 568-569)

  6. Changing Face of Mental Health Care • More Scientifically Driven Treatments • More Manualized Treatments • Fewer Psychologists Providing Treatment • Briefer Therapies & Cost Containment • Fewer Hospitalizations • Greater Use of Medications

  7. Duration of Therapy • Seligman (1995): • Treatment Worked • 87% Improved • Long Term Treatment Better than Short-Term • Therapy vs. Therapy Plus Meds Were Similar • Limit Care = Poor Outcome Consumer Reports Magazine

  8. Consumer Reports, 2004 Survey

  9. Psychoanalytic Concepts • The core issue in psychoanalysis is the removal of repressions that prevent the ego from developing into a healthy person • Psychoanalysis lifts repression via • Dream analysis • Free association • Interpretation • Psychoanalysis can be of long-duration or can be a brief therapy • Evaluation issue: Insight or social conversion process? Ch 17.2

  10. Evaluation of Psychodynamic Therapies • Classical Psychoanalytic treatment has been evaluated in only 4 studies • These studies are limited by lack of a control group • General findings: • Patients with anxiety disorders do better in psychoanalysis than do schizophrenic patients • Better educated clients do better in therapy • Interpretation by the therapist may not be helpful for the therapy process • Outcome research has demonstrated that brief interpersonal therapy (IPT) is as effective as CBT for depression and bulimia nervosa • Process research in brief therapy has emphasized the importance of the therapeuticworking alliance Ch 17.3

  11. Evaluation of Client-Centered Therapy • Humanistic psychotherapy assumes that people must be understood from their own point of view • Psychological disorders arise when people fail to appreciate their own internal worlds • Therapist role is to be accepting of the client and to be non-judgmental • Positive outcomes are not always related to therapist empathy Ch 17.4

  12. Evaluation of Gestalt Therapy • Gestalt psychology holds that the goal of therapy is to make people aware of their own basic needs and desires • People create their own existence • There is a general lack of research on the effectiveness of Gestalt therapy • Some of the technique associated with Gestalt therapy (e.g. the empty-chair) have been shown to reduce self-rated anger Ch 17.5

  13. Evaluation of Counterconditioning / Exposure Methods • Counterconditioning involves imaginal and/or real-life exposure to threat stimuli • Systematic desensitization involves having a deeply relaxed person imagine a series of fear-inducing situations • Systematic desensitization / exposure methods are effective for the treatment of anxiety-related problems • Simple phobias, agoraphobia • PTSD • Obsessive-compulsive disorder • Panic disorder Ch 17.6

  14. Evaluation of Operant Methods • Operant methods involve the systematic rewarding of desirable behaviors and extinguishing undesirable behaviors • Operant methods are effective for a wide range of behavioral problems, particularly in children • Caveat: The problem behavior must be an operant (i.e. under the control of a contingent reinforcer) Ch 17.7

  15. Evaluation of Rational-Emotive Behavior Therapy • Rational-emotive behavior therapy (REBT) acts to remove unreasonable cognitive beliefs • REBT has been shown to • Reduce self-reports of anxiety • Improve self-reports of social anxiety • Reduce anger, depression and antisocial behavior • Reduce the Type A behavior pattern Ch 17.8

  16. Evaluation of Beck’s Cognitive Therapy • People in emotional distress operate under cognitive schemas that are disabling • The goal of Beck’s cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) is to challenge these schemas • CBT has been shown to • Improve depression and to prevent future depression episodes • Be comparable to drug therapy in overall effectiveness for the treatment of depression • See pp. 581-582, for comparison with Ellis’ REBT Ch 17.9

  17. Generalization/Maintenance of Treatment Effects • Generalization seeks to identify the factors that allow clients to maintain treatment-related gains while in the real world • Using intermittent and natural reinforcers is helpful • Eliminating secondary gain (through use of paradox) • Reducing the likelihood of relapse by encouraging clients to attribute their slips to external, unstable, specific and controllable factors • Attribution of treatment gains to oneself may be usefulfor the person(e.g., self-control strategies) • Some basic issues in cognitive and behavioral therapy • Internal behavior and cognition • Importance of relationship factors (the therapeutic alliance) Ch 17.10

  18. Evaluation of Couples and Marital Therapy • The focus of couples and family therapy is on improving communication • Family/couples therapy is • More successful in conjoint therapy than individual therapy • Successful in reducing relationship stress • Not always clinically significant • Depression, “emotional disengagement”, and low frequency of sexual behavior can be predictors of poor outcome Ch 17.11

  19. Review of Community Psychology • The focus of community psychology is prevention of disorder • Community psychology has been useful in • Prevention of cigarette smoking • Prevention of HIV infection • Reducing the risk of cardiovascular disease • Community psychology efforts do not work when the disorder of interest is not subject to social/environmental change Ch 17.12

  20. Psychotherapy Integration • Integration seeks to determine the common ground among the various therapy schools • Technical eclecticism refers to a situation in which a therapist uses techniques from other disciplines, without adopting the theories that spawned them • Common factorism seeks strategies that are common to all therapy schools • Theoretical integration attempts to synthesize both theory and technique across schools Ch 17.13

  21. Cultural Issues in Therapy • Cultural diversity is the norm in the United States • There is an assumption, not proven, that clients do better in therapy with therapists who are similar to the client in cultural and ethnic background • Therapists need to • Understand unique problems experienced by clients from diverse groups. • Develop sensitivity to the cultural background of each patient. Ch 17.14

  22. Cultural Issues in Therapy • African Americans tend to have better rapport with African American therapists than white therapists • More guarded and less open with white therapists • However, therapists who are highly empathic are rated as more helpful. • Latinos • Latino clients are themselves a diverse group based on their geographical roots. • Be careful not to generalize from one group to all Latinos. • Cultural barrier to “seeking help”, especially for Latino men. • Importance of religion, socioeconomic level, and any language differences need to be taken into consideration. • CBT with its emphasis on guidance and problem solving may be more acceptable to Latinos.

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