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Psychotherapy

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Title: Psychotherapy


1
  • Chapter 16
  • Psychotherapy
  • The Elements of the Treatment Process
  • Therapy Types (Insight, Behavior, Biomedical,
    Blended)
  • Application Looking for a Therapist

2
The Elements of the Treatment Process
  • Treatments How Many Types Are There?
  • All psychotherapies involve a helping
    relationship (treatment) between a professional
    (therapist) and another person in need of help
    (client).
  • There are three main categories of therapy
  • Insight therapies.
  • Behavior therapies.
  • Biomedical therapies.

3
  • Clients Who Seeks Therapy?
  • Approximately 15 of Americans seek mental health
    services each year.
  • Most common problems are excessive anxiety and
    depression.
  • Milder problems, including a career decision and
    relationships.
  • Women, people with medical insurance, and people
    with more education are more likely to seek
    treatment.
  • many who need therapy do not receive it

4
  • Therapists Who Provides Treatment?
  • Psychologists and psychiatrists are the most
    common providers of treatment.
  • Therapy is also provided by
  • Psychiatric social workers.
  • Psychiatric nurses.
  • Counselors and social workers
  • Clinical psychologists and counseling
    psychologists specialize in the diagnosis and
    treatment of psychological disorders and everyday
    behavioral problems.

5
  • Psychiatrists are physicians who specialize in
    the treatment of psychological disorders.
  • focus on more severe disorders
  • earn an M.D. degree and typically emphasize drug
    therapies
  • Psychiatric social workers work as part of a
    treatment team with a psychologists or
    psychiatrist.
  • They have a masters degree and usually help
    patients integrate back into the community.
  • Psychiatric nurses earn a bachelors or masters
    degree and usually work with hospitalized
    patients.

6
Insight Therapies
  • Insight therapies involve verbal interactions
    intended to enhance clients self-knowledge and
    thus promote healthful changes in personality and
    behavior.
  • Insight therapies include
  • Psychoanalysis.
  • Client-centered therapy.
  • Cognitive therapy.
  • Group therapy.

7
  • Psychoanalysis was developed by Sigmund Freud,
    and emphasizes the recovery of unconscious
    conflicts, motives, and defenses through
    techniques such as free association, dream
    analysis and transference.
  • Client-Centered Therapy (Carol Rogers) is an
    insight therapy that emphasizes providing a
    supportive emotional climate for clients, who
    play a major role in determining the pace and
    direction of their therapy.
  • Group therapy is the simultaneous treatment of
    several or more clients (typically five to ten
    people) in a group

8
Behavior Therapies
  • Insight therapists believe that behaviors are
    symptoms of underlying psychological issues.
  • In contrast, behavior therapists argue that the
    behaviors themselves are the problem.
  • Behavior therapies involve the application of
    the principles of learning to direct efforts to
    change clients maladaptive behaviors.

9
  • Behavior therapy is based on two assumptions
  • Behavior is a product of learning.
  • What has been learned can be unlearned.
  • Clients vague complaints are redefined in terms
    of concrete, specific goals.
  • Specific procedures are then used for specific
    kinds of problems to reach the goal.

10
Biomedical Therapies
  • Biomedical therapies are physiological
    interventions intended to reduce symptoms
    associated with psychological disorders.
  • Two prominent biomedical therapies are
  • Drug therapy.
  • Electroconvulsive (ECT).

11
  • Treatment with Drugs
  • Psychopharmacotherapy (or drug therapy) is the
    treatment of mental disorders with medication.
  • Therapeutic drugs fall into four main categories
  • Antianxiety drugs.
  • Antipsychotic drugs.
  • Antidepressant drugs.
  • Mood stabilizers.

12
  • Antianxiety drugs relieve tension, apprehension,
    and nervousness.
  • Antipsychotic drugs are used to gradually reduce
    psychotic symptoms, including hyperactivity,
    mental confusion, hallucinations, and delusions.
  • Antidepressant drugs gradually elevate mood and
    help bring people out of a depression.
  • Mood stabilizers are drugs used to control mood
    swings in patients with bipolar mood disorders.

13
  • Electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) is a biomedical
    treatment in which electric shock is used to
    produce a cortical seizure accompanied by
    convulsions.
  • ECT is primarily used to treat depression.
  • Patients are given a light anesthetic and muscle
    relaxers to prevent spinal fractures.
  • Electric current is applied for about a second,
    which triggers a brief seizure.
  • Typically, patients receive six to twelve
    treatments over the course of a month.

14
  • Blending Approaches to Treatment
  • It is becoming increasingly common for therapists
    to draw from various therapeutic approaches to
    treat a client.
  • Studies show that there is, indeed, merit to this
    idea.
  • Today, most therapists describe themselves as
    eclectic drawing ideas from two or more
    systems of therapy.

15
Application Looking for a Therapist
  • When Should You Seek Professional Treatment?
  • In general, you should seek treatment when
  • You have no one to lean on.
  • The people you do lean on are tiring of providing
    advice and emotional support.
  • You feel helpless and overwhelmed.

16
  • Where Do You Find Therapeutic Services?
  • Most therapists do not operate in private
    practice.
  • Many work in
  • Institutional settings (such as community mental
    health centers).
  • Human service agencies.

17
  • Is the Therapists Profession or Sex Important?
  • Researchers have not found any reliable link
    between the therapists profession (e.g.,
    psychologist versus psychiatrist) and therapeutic
    efficacy.
  • This is a subjective matter.
  • Thus, if the client thinks they will feel more
    comfortable with a therapist of the same gender,
    then they should find one that is the same gender.

18
  • Is Therapy Always Expensive?
  • Not necessarily. Costs can be reduced by
  • Seeking treatment from providers who are not in
    private practice (e.g., human service agencies).
  • Using health insurance.

19
  • Is the Therapists Theoretical Approach
    Important?
  • For certain types of problems, certain
    theoretical approaches are a better fit.
  • For example
  • Cognitive therapy is best for panic disorders.
  • Behavior therapy (systematic desensitization) is
    best for phobias.
  • OCD is best treated with behavior therapy and
    medication.

20
  • What is Therapy Like?
  • It is important to have realistic expectations
    about therapy.
  • Therapy is usually a slow process.
  • Therapy is hard work.
  • Your therapist is only a facilitator. Ultimately
    you have to make changes in your behavior or
    personality in order to see improvement.
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