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A Brief Introduction To Prevention

A Brief Introduction To Prevention . Presentation By: Patrice Allen Shaji Daniel Gary Dobbs Hsiu-Kuan Tsai Teresa Vazquez. Change and Intervention. What happens after you build a relationship with your clients?

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A Brief Introduction To Prevention

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  1. A Brief Introduction To Prevention Presentation By: Patrice Allen Shaji Daniel Gary Dobbs Hsiu-KuanTsai Teresa Vazquez

  2. Change and Intervention What happens after you build a relationship with your clients? Many counselors do emphasize the importance of relationship building most counselors emphasis the necessity of further intervention for change to occur. Approaches to counseling and psychotherapy traditionally have focused on the one of three intrapsychic domains: Affect, Cognition and Behavior Affect- referring to feelings we experience and express Cognition- are the thoughts we think 3. Behavior – are overt acts we do

  3. Ready…set…go? Most clients report that the reason they seek counseling is to change painful feelings such as anxiety or depression and recent research indicates that depression and anxiety show larger changes than any other domain after counseling. Were to start is the big disagreement between counselors and psychotherapist. The three systems should be targeted but where to start can be controversial. Permanence o change –If we change behavior without attention to underlying feelings will the problem resurface elsewhere? Desynchrony- even if a client changes their behavior , weeks may pass before the corresponding feeling change occurs.

  4. Efficacy of Counseling Research findings support the general efficacy of counseling, another words clients who receive treatment enjoy improvement than do two-thirds of persons who do not receive counseling. Not anyone approach can be superior, and most research shows that not one method is superior. Social learning approaches are superior to impatient clients. Cognitive and behavioral methods appear more effective with impulsive clients who are also depressed and anxious. The text emphasize the benefit for beginning counselors to familiarize themselves with basic theory and practice of many approaches.

  5. 45. Basic Counseling Text The following text present overviews of various counseling approaches, professions, and basic counseling skills. Theory and Practice of Counseling & Psychotherapy By: Gerald Corey Current Psychotherapies 8th By: Corsini and Wedding The Skilled Helper, 9th By: Gerard Egan

  6. 46. Person-Centered Counseling Person centered, client-centered, or nondirective theory centers on the work of Carl Rogers. Client centered counselors tend to see there clients positively and use empathy, warmth, support, unconditional positive regard and genuineness. Counseling notice their clients feelings and empathized with those feelings to help clients fully experience their affect and become more open to their life experiences.

  7. 47. Behavior Counseling Behavioral counseling tends to be the pragmatists of the counseling profession. They maintain that since it is the behavior that we ultimately want to change, then it is the behavior that we should target in counseling. Whether it is to stop smoking, anxiety about school performance or depression, counselors prescribe, a regimen of relaxation and assertive training. Another example may be is a child is misbehaving a counselor may teach the parents about rewarding the more appropriate behavior.

  8. 48. Cognitive, Cognitive/Behavioral Counseling, and Social Learning Theory This represent the latest movement in the counseling profession. These counselors focus on inappropriate thoughts that cause harmful and painful feelings. Cognitive, Cognitive/Behavioral Counseling, have proven to be the most effective approach for helping clients with depression, generalized anxiety, phobias, panic disorders, and OCD.

  9. 48. Cognitive, Cognitive/Behavioral Counseling, and Social Learning Theory On, Social Learning Theory, special emphasis is placed on individuals learned expectations. As a result from their individual experiences individuals learn the following: Some event are ore personally rewarding then others. Certain behavior can produce desired events, although there maybe events that are uncontrollable. People differ in their feelings of competence for doing the behaviors that can produce desired events. Help to modify clients expectation, exp. Snakes

  10. Presentation By Shaji Daniel

  11. Gestalt Counseling

  12. Gestalt Counseling • Fritz Pearl is the counselor most strongly associated with Gestalt Counseling • The goal: • to help the client move towards self-support • Emphasis is given for body movement as a method of • experiencing feelings and • facilitating psychological growth. • Pay particular attention (as in the Person-centered Counseling) to • noticing client feelings, • Staying in the here- and now, and • Avoiding intellectual analysis of problem

  13. Psychoanalytic and Psychodynamic Counseling

  14. Psychoanalytic and Psychodynamic Counseling • Sigmund Freud established the foundation psychoanalytic counseling • All other psychoanalytic and psychodynamic counseling theories evolved from there. • Freud’s theories on unconscious and personality development led to the development of indigenous counseling techniques • Later different counseling theories were developed ( e.g. Behavioral counseling, rational emotive therapy) were developed as a radical departure from Psychoanalytic theory. • Making the unconscious material conscious • To help counselor and client to gain insight into mechanism of psychological adjustment

  15. Psychoanalytic (Cont.) • Psychoanalytic Counselors attempt to understand the client through client- therapist relationship • Bring transference (the projection onto the counselor of clients’ feelings toward the authority figure – e.g. parents) into open • This helps the client to: • gain new understanding of their psychological processes, and • ameliorate troubling symptom

  16. Existential Counseling

  17. Existential Counseling • Existential Counseling • Examine the role of abstract and philosophical issues in the psychological lives of the individuals • grapple with basic dimensions of life and death more than any other counseling approaches, • People are viewed in two terms: • Being (an awareness of oneself) • Nonbeing (a loss of identity) • Anxiety as the experience of the threat of imminent nonbeing.

  18. Existential counseling (Cont.) • According to Existential Counselors • Client seek counseling to expand their psychological world • Knowledge and insight follow behavioral change, not vice versa. • The job of the counselor is to expose oneself to clients • By doing this clients can become aware of similar qualities in themselves

  19. Group Counseling

  20. Group Counseling • Group counselors: • Subscribe to any of the counseling approaches • They ,in common, recognize the benefits of working with more than one client at a time • Counseling can be done efficiently if the members of the group as selected based on a relatively similar problem • Interaction is done between the members than with the counselor • With therapeutic groups, the role of the counselor is more a facilitator than an active participant or a leader • The group counselors supply group rules and emotional challenges • They also provide high amounts of support and interpretation of group process.

  21. Presentation By: Gary Dobbs

  22. 53. FAMILY / SYSTEMS COUNSELING

  23. RELATIVELY NEW • LOOK AT THE INFLUENCE OF SOCIAL SYSTEMS ON THE CLIENT • GOALS OF THE COUNSELOR: • METHODS OF COMMUNICATION W/IN THE FAMILY, FAMILY STRUCTURE, AND MEMBERS’ GROWTH GESTALT: PSYCHOLINGUISTICS: HOW LANGUAGE INFLUENCES WHAT WE THINK, DO, AND FEEL FAMILY / SYSTEMS APPROACH

  24. 54. MULTICULTURAL COUNSELING

  25. EMPHASIZES CULTURAL, ETHNIC, AND RACIAL INFLUENCES ON COUNSELING PROCESS • COUNSELOR SHOULD: • BE AWARE OF OWN VALUES AND BIASES • ATTEND TO POTENTIAL INFLUENCES ON COUNSELING PROCESS BROUGHT BY CULTURAL BACKGROUND A MULTICULTURAL APPROACH

  26. COUNSELORS SHOULD: • SEEK CULTURALLY SPECIFIC KNOWLEDGE WHEN WORKING W/ A FEW DIFFERENT CULTURAL GROUPS • APPLY THEIR KNOWLEDGE AND SKILLS IN A CULTURALLY SENSITIVE MATTER • FIND A BALANCE BETWEEN THE CLIENT’S CULTURAL BACKGROUND AND THEIR INDIVUALY UNIQUENESS A MULTICULTURAL APPROACH

  27. 55. THE FEMINIST THEORY

  28. 5 CORE VALUES • 1. HOW DOES SEX-ROLE SOCIALIZATION INFLUENCE PERSONAL AND VOCATIONAL CHOICES • 2. LOCATING CAUSES OF PHYCHOLOGICAL PROBLEMS IN THE ENVIRONMENT INSTEAD OF INTRAPSYCHIC CONDITIONS 55. THE FEMINIST THEORY

  29. 3. ENGAGING IN SOCIAL CHANGE ACTIONS THAT MIGHT IMPROVE WOMEN’S PSYCHOLOGICAL AND PHYSICAL HEALTH • 4. AN EMPHASIS IN EQUALITY IN RELATIONSHIPS • 5. WORK TO RAISE PERSONAL AND SOCIAL CONSIOUSNESS ABOUT WOMEN’S ISSUES 55. THE FEMINIST THEORY

  30. Presentation By: Angela Tsai

  31. 56. BRIEF THERAPY Major Focus: Cost limits Time limits Primary Goals: Reduction of symptoms Restoration of functioning Emphasize: Efficiency Outcomes Benefits of provided services

  32. 56. Solution-Focused Therapy Key Concepts: Positive Orientation Looking For what is working Emphasizes client strengths; minimize intervention Focus on current and future goals Basic Assumptions: The client is the expert on his or her own life Small change lead into bigger changes The client have all the resource they need to change There are advantages to a positive focus on solution and on the future. There are exceptions to every problem

  33. Consumer Reports survey(1995) • More improvement • Steenbarger, 1994 • No different for BT • Kopta ,Howard, Lowry, and Beutler(1994) • Acute ( temper outbursts and hopelessness): • quick improvement • - Characterological (paranoia and sleep trouble) : • take longer to evidence change 56. Do they( BT, SFBT) work?

  34. Common factor approach - There are common elements in different therapeutic approaches • There common elements: - Developing a therapeutic relationship - Creating or discovering a shared worldview - Increasing the client’s expectations for improvement - Choosing or creating effective intervention 57. Integrative Approaches

  35. 57. Integrative Approaches Common stages of change - The different interventions can be more effective in certain stage Six common change stages: -Precontemplation: little or no awareness -Contemplation: aware of problem -Preparation: intend to change -Action : changes behaviour -Maintenance: continue the change -Termination: problem solved

  36. 58. Narrative Therapy Key issue: - Focus on the role of language and stories Encourage clients to tell their story Assist clients to find methods to overcome obstacles Process: - talking narrative - make sense of narrative (meaning making) Advantages: - Positively affect psychology & physical health - Strengthen the working alliance - Help clients re-experience emotional events - Come to a coherent understanding of the evens - Can be combined with any other approach

  37. Presentation By: Teresa Vazquez

  38. 59. New and Emerging Approaches New counseling approaches are continually being introduced yet many disappear after a few years. Listed below are a few new approaches which according to the author may stick around a little longer. 1.Acceptance and commitment therapy- http://contextualpsychology.org/ 2. Schema Therapy- www.schematherapy.com 3. Emotion-focus Therapy

  39. Acceptance and Commitment Therapy 1.Acceptance and commitment therapy Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) is a unique empirically based psychological intervention that uses acceptance and mindfulness strategies, together with commitment and behavior change strategies, to increase psychological flexibility. Psychological flexibility means contacting the present moment fully as a conscious human being, and based on what the situation affords, changing or persisting in behavior in the service of chosen values. This theory focuses on the idea that some individuals focus on having to much control of a situation which leads them to psychological problems. Example: A client is obsessing about a 70 hr. work week. The therapist would help the client to perceive these thoughts as thoughts, accept them with out struggling, set goals in relation to what the client values in this context and act to fulfill the goals.

  40. Schema Therapy Schema Therapy- www.schematherapy.com Schemas are seen as self-defeating themes that individuals continue to repeat throughout there lives. The goals of Schema Therapy are: to help patients to stop using maladaptive coping styles and thus get back in touch with their core feelings, to heal their early schemas; to learn how to flip out of self-defeating schema modes as quickly as possible to eventually to get their emotional needs met in everyday life.

  41. Emotion-Focus Therapy 3. Emotion-focus Therapy- “Whereas thinking usually changes thoughts, feeling uses changes emotion.” in other words people who wrote about the facts of a traumatic episode did not show improvement whereas people who wrote about emotional aspects did.

  42. 60. Research on Counseling and Psychotherapy Research in counseling focus on process and outcome questions. BASICLLY: Is counseling effective? Basic and previous research, most reviewers would say yes, but a clear and present factor is that counselors are asking better questions. Research also shows that no one approach is universal, in the sense that not all clients respond uniformly to a specific approach. Although a research-based approach is a great place to start most counselors adapt and individualize there approach understanding that with each client unique elements will arise.

  43. 61. Other Important Sources Clinical Textbook of Addictive Disorders By: Frances. R, Sheldon I. Miller Reality Therapy: A New Approach to Psychiatry By: William Glasser The Practice and Theory of Individual Psychology By: Adler, A. The DSM-IV-TR Authors

  44. 61. Other Important Sources To download a digital copy of the following presentation please visit: http://thepillarofpeace.weebly.com/uhv-masters-program.html

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