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Psychology of Patient Care

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Psychology of Patient Care. Goal of psychology is to 'understand and predict human behaviour' ... At times the sensation is unbearable, and she cannot sleep. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Psychology of Patient Care


1
Psychology of Patient Care
  • Goal of psychology is to understand and predict
    human behaviour
  • Application to pharmacy practice situations
  • Role of theory
  • in understanding/explaining behaviour
  • in intervening to change behaviour
  • in providing practical approaches to PC

2
Psychological Theory Applied to Pharmacy Practice
  • View Person as a
  • Anatomical being
  • Biological being
  • Temporal being
  • Thinking being
  • Psychological being
  • Social being
  • Relevant Theory
  • Neuropsychological
  • Behaviouralism
  • Developmentalism
  • Cognitivist
  • Psycho-analytic
  • Socio-psychological

3
Neuropsychological Approaches
  • Focus on genetic components
  • Deterministic model of human behaviour highly
    predictable outcomes from interventions
  • Reductionist approach to human behaviour
  • Major focus of pharmacologic therapies

4
Behavioural Approaches
  • Views human beings as biological entities
    struggling for survival in complex systems
  • Personality is a a learned behaviour that confers
    an adaptive value
  • Human responses are stable and predictable in
    stable and predictable situations
  • Environment causes personality

5
Developmentalist Approaches
  • Psycho-social development is rooted in
    physiological development
  • Time is a major determinant of behaviour and
    personality
  • Clearly demarcated stages of development that
    must be crossed in a linear way

6
Cognitivist Approaches
  • Human beings are unique in their ability to
    reason and to think
  • Behaviour is governed by thoughts aimed at
    achieving goals - problem behaviours are a
    reflection of problem goals
  • Few, if any, instincts or unconscious motivators
  • Changing thinking can change feelings

7
Psychoanalytic Approaches
  • Principle of psychic determinism nothing
    happens by chance
  • Theories of personality structure and formation
  • Ego defences as primary determinants of behaviour
    and personality

8
Socio-psychological approaches
  • Behaviour is governed by social influences
  • Issues of conformity, attitude formation and
    group processes
  • How do others influence behaviour (and
    thoughts, attitudes and feelings)the role of
    social influence in personality development and
    behavioural expression

9
Role of Theory
  • Represents a continuum
  • No one theory appears to adequately account for
    the complexity of human behaviour
  • No model for integrating all theories
  • Emphasis and application of key points to
    specific situations

10
Case Study Anxiety
  • CW is a 22 year old engineering graduate student.
    Despite achieving good grades throughout high
    school and her first two years of university, she
    is complaining of numerous somatic symptoms she
    has mid-night awakenings, sweaty palms, racing
    pulse and palpitations. At times the sensation
    is unbearable, and she cannot sleep. Her MD has
    ruled out any physical pathology and has
    prescribed lorazepam SL 1-2mg tid prn and hs.

11
Background Terms
  • Stress An external stimulus interpreted as
    dangerous
  • Fear Short-term physiological/psychological
    response to stress
  • Anxiety Longer-term physiological or
    psychological response to stress

12
Anxiety Disorders
  • Most common mental illness in N. America
  • lt25 of Americans receive any kind of treatment
  • Mortality/morbidity significance
  • Examples (DSM IV) panic, phobia, OCD,
    post-traumatic stress, generalized anxiety
  • Why does it only affect some people?

13
Neuropsychologic Approach
  • Genetic component to anxiety some people are
    born worriers
  • MRI studies suggest differences in the way
    anxious and non-anxious peoples brains respond
    to stress
  • Anxiety breakdown in mechanism that keeps
    normal anxious response from spinning out of
    control

14
Neuropsychological Interventions
  • 1) Block stimulation of cortex
  • 2) Block release of neurotransmitters from the
    amygdala or other areas of the brain
  • 3) Block end-organs (e.g. adrenal cortex,
    cardiac tissue, respiratory system etc.)
  • 4) Target neurotransmitter cascade through CNS
    role of pharmaceuticals

15
Issues with Medications in Treatment of Anxiety
  • Side effects (including dependency)
  • Onset of action
  • Reduction of efficacy over time
  • Masking of symptoms rather than treating
    underlying problem
  • Short term efficiency vs. long term efficacy
  • Does this approach make sense?

16
Behavioural Approach
  • Rather than block anxiety-provoking stimuli,
    try to get patient accustomed to it so they dont
    experience it in the same manner through use of
  • habituation techniques
  • conditioning techniques (desensitizing)
  • reward structures

17
Developmentalist Approach
  • Anxiety can be seen as a mis-fit between stage of
    development and the environment
  • Use developmental theory to align environment to
    individuals stage and needs
  • e.g. Stage 6 (Early Adulthood (20-35))
  • - major crisis is intimacy vs. isolation
  • - address this issue to deal with anxiety

18
Cognitivist Approach
  • Rather than train people to deal with anxiety,
    encourage them to use the power of the mind to
    reason through it.
  • - identify triggers
  • - identify goals for responding to triggers
  • - use cognitive models to understand how anxiety
    can be thought- through

19
Psycho-analytic Approach
  • Recognize that you are anxious because you WANT
    to be anxious (ie. Anxiety confers some benefit
    to you)
  • - identify structure of personality and how this
    has lead to certain, ritualized ego defences that
    manifest as anxiety
  • - understanding this provides key to treatment

20
Socio-psychologic approach
  • Determine how individuals thoughts, feelings and
    behaviours are influenced by the real or imagined
    presence of others
  • Define the construal the way in which people
    perceive, comprehend, and interpret their social
    world
  • Key is the peer group

21
So how does a tiny little pill like that actually
work?
  • Neuropsychologic targets receptors
  • Behavioural stimulus-response conditioning
  • Cognitive mask symptoms to provide zone for
    development of self awareness
  • Developmental mask symptoms
  • Psychoanalytic mask symptoms
  • Social-psychological mask symptoms

22
Are there alternatives to the little white pill?
  • Neuropsychological other little white pills
  • Behavioural biofeedback
  • Developmental lifestyle changes
  • Cognitive talk-therapy
  • Psychoanalytic hypnosis, analysis
  • Socio-psychological peer grouping

23
Summary
  • Anxiety is one of a cluster of conditions that
    form a large part of professional practice
  • Anxiety is a multi-faceted medical problem
  • Focus on neuropsychological approach solely is
    unsatisfactory and ineffective
  • Other interventions must be exercised in
    combination

24
Summary
  • Major issues in pharmacy practice include
  • - mental health issues
  • - lifestyle modification issues (smoking, diet,
    unsafe sexual practices, etc.)
  • - motivation for compliance to medication/lifestyl
    e modification regimes

25
Applying psychological theory to pharmacy practice
  • Walk around the problem consider both the
    physiological/pharmacological issues and the
    psychological issues
  • No single, perfect formula or solution to complex
    human, behavioural issues - instead, must rely
    upon using a variety of methods to address
    individual needs

26
Case Study
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