1 / 64

Therapy

Therapy. Psychodynamic Therapy. Psychodynamic Therapy. Used for unfocused anxiety/depression Psychoanalysis - pioneered by Freud  intensive technique for exploring the unconscious

Télécharger la présentation

Therapy

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. Therapy

  2. Psychodynamic Therapy

  3. Psychodynamic Therapy • Used for unfocused anxiety/depression • Psychoanalysis- pioneered by Freud intensive technique for exploring the unconscious - Freud believed that anxiety disorders are inabilities to resolve inner conflicts (they become repressed) in the unconscious between the id and the superego

  4. Psychodynamic Therapy • GOAL of Psychoanalysis: - make unconscious conflict  conscious - repressed material can then be dealt with - ego can be strengthened & defense mechanisms do not need to be used

  5. Job of the Therapist • Main job: help a patient bring repressed thoughts into consciousness & gain insight into the relationship between current symptoms & the repressed conflict

  6. Job of the Therapist • Therapy succeeds when patients are released from the repression established in early childhood - often through catharsis (AKA insight therapy) – expressing strong felt, but usually repressed emotions; a healing emotional release

  7. Job of the Therapist • It is an attempt to reconstruct long-standing repressed memories & work through painful feelings to an effective resolution • This takes years, requires introspective patients who are highly motivated, verbally fluent & have $ to continue the therapy

  8. Techniques Used • Free Association- say whatever comes to mind regardless of painful or irrelevant thoughts - therapist will note patterns that lie beneath the words (the surface) 2. Catharsis- see notes

  9. Free Association • Start with a recent experience, memory, or dream and write every image or idea that enters your awareness • Don’t self-edit OR refrain from logic

  10. Techniques Used 3. Dream Analysis- examines content of a person’s dreams to discover motivations, life experiences, desires - 2 kinds of content: a) manifest- people remember upon awakening b) latent- hidden, deeper content

  11. Techniques Used 4. Analysis of Transference- transferring of feelings about a person in the past to the therapist due to unfinished business - positive- feeling of love/admiration - negative- feeling of anger/hostility - therapist provides a stage for re- enacting unresolved conflicts

  12. Techniques Used 5. Analysis of Countertransference- - therapist begins to view client as someone in therapists life & projects feeling toward the client - can provide useful material to look at with client, but must be careful - become mirrors for one another

  13. Techniques Used 6. Analysis of Resistance - individuals put up barriers to free association - resisting to “work” with the therapist - therapist’s job is to break down areas the client does not want to discuss

  14. Techniques Used • Projective Techniques- help access unconscious, esp. in children - Rorschach, TAT, incomplete sentences, draw a picture

  15. Behavioral Therapy

  16. Behavioral Therapy • Abnormal behaviors are acquired through a learning process that follows basic principles of conditioning & learning • Therapy includes applying principles of conditioning & reinforcement to increase frequency of desired behaviors or decrease frequency of problem behaviors

  17. Behavioral Therapy • Problems that generally use behavior modification/therapy: - fears/phobias, compulsions, depression, addictions, aggression, & delinquent behavior

  18. Behavioral Therapy • When people can’t cope effectively, their maladaptive reactions can be overcome by therapy based on learning or relearning

  19. Behavioral Therapy • 3 Types of Behavioral Therapy: • Counter-Conditioning- - a new response is conditioned to replace or “counter” a maladaptive response ex. Child afraid of the dark  have child listen to their favorite song while sitting in the dark

  20. Behavioral Therapy - Techniques Used: a) systematic desensitization- client is taught to prevent the arousal of anxiety by confronting the feared stimulus & using relaxation techniques; used for social phobias (The King’s Speech);

  21. Behavioral Therapy b) implosion- opposite; exposes a client to anxiety, provoking the stimuli (most frightening is the imagination) but in a safe setting; person cannot run away; “tough love” c) flooding- client is placed in or exposed to the phobic situation; used for agoraphobia

  22. Behavioral Therapy *all 3 have in common  exposure through imagery, contact, or virtual reality; all are exposed to object feared

  23. Behavioral Therapy d) aversion therapy- used for patients attracted to harmful stimuli (drug addictions, violent behavior); an attractive stimuli is paired with shock or drugs (noxious stimuli) to get the patient to pair the noxious stimuli with the harmful behavior

  24. Behavioral Therapy 2. Contingency Management- Skinner; changing behavior by modifying consequences (operant cond.) - Techniques Used: a) token economy- positive reinforcement; desired behaviors are defined & token payoffs are given when behavior is performed (gold stars); can later be exchanged for rewards, etc.

  25. Behavioral Therapy 3. Social Learning Theory- clients observe models’ desirable behaviors being reinforced b/c people learn via observation - used to overcome phobias & to build social skills - based on Bandura’s research

  26. Behavioral Therapy - Techniques Used: a) Participant Modeling- therapist demonstrates desired behavior & client is helped to imitate behavior with support & encouragement b) Behavioral Rehearsal- visual; how one should behave in a situation  helps strengthen social skills

  27. Behavioral Therapy Most common problem: lack of assertiveness  often in children (have deficits in social skills that may lead to problems later)  pre-schools, elem. schools look to build skills in withdrawn, isolated children

  28. Cognitive Therapy

  29. Cognitive Therapy • Attempts to change the feelings & behaviors by changing the way a client thinks about or perceives significant life events

  30. Cognitive Therapy • Abnormal behavior patterns start with problems in what people think & how they think (cognitive process) • Therapy will focus on changing how people think

  31. Cognitive Therapy

  32. Cognitive Therapy • 2 Types of Cognitive Therapy: 1. Cognitive Behavior Modification- • Combines thoughts w/ focus on reinforcement contingencies in modifying performance • Unacceptable behavior patterns are changed/modified by cognitive restructuring

  33. Cognitive Therapy • Change the person’s negative self statement into constructive coping statements • Ex. I am boring, no one will invite me to another party. Change this thought to  next time I’ll tell a joke, be proactive, or more responsive to other’s stories

  34. Cognitive Therapy • Step 1: figure out together the kind of thinking that is leading to dysfunctional behavior • Step 2: develop new self-statements that minimize negative thoughts that elicit anxiety or lower self-esteem

  35. Cognitive Therapy • Step 3: set goals • Step 4: develop strategies for meeting them  develop self-efficacy • Step 5: evaluate feedback

  36. Cognitive Therapy - Changing False Beliefs- cognitive therapy for depression (Aaron Beck) - depression arises when people are unaware of their negative automatic thoughts & faulty thinking

  37. Cognitive Therapy - often emotional stress is caused by cognitive misunderstanding and failure to distinguish between reality & one’s expectations  MUST challenge patient’s basic assumptions

  38. Cognitive Therapy 2. Rational Emotive Therapy (RET)- based on the transformation/changing of irrational beliefs that cause severe emotional reactions (ex. Anxiety) - Ellis

  39. Cognitive Therapy - teach the client to recognize the “shoulds, oughts, haves, & musts” that control their actions & prevent them from choosing the life they want

  40. Cognitive Therapy - through rational confrontation, client can dispute & examine alternative reasons for their thoughts/actions - this is followed up by replacing dogmatic thinking w/ rational, situationally appropriate ideas

  41. Cognitive Therapy - it aims to increase individual’s self-worth by getting rid of faulty beliefs that block personal growth

  42. Group Therapy

  43. Group Therapy • Can sometimes be more effective • Less Expensive- small # of mental health personnel can help more people • Power of Groups- less threatening, provides opportunities to practice interpersonal skills and observe others

  44. Group Therapy • Allows for corrective emotional experiences to take place in a “family-like” atmosphere • Helps people realize they are not alone • Provides social support outside of therapy

  45. Group Therapy • Different Types: • Marital & Family- each member is treated as a member of a system of relationships - therapist helps to understand what the problems are in the family

  46. Group Therapy - seeks to help communication, understand communication styles & how to express themselves - therapist acts as interpreter, clarifier, mediator, & referee when helping to resolve dysfunctional elements

  47. Group Therapy 2. Community Support Groups - 10+ million Americans participate in self-help groups - pioneered by women’s groups & AA - 4 Main Groups:

  48. Group Therapy a) Addictive behavior b) Physical/mental disorder c) Life transition or other crises d) Traumas experienced by friends or relatives w/ serious problems

  49. Group Therapy • Many groups popping up on the Internet  providing social support, hope & control for problems; people dispense info about disorders & treatments

More Related