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THERAPY

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The treatment of psychological disorders through psychological means generally ... Tegretol, Depakote (divalproex), Topamax, and Lamictal (lamotrigine) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: THERAPY


1
THERAPY
2
HISTORY OF THERAPY
  • Trephining
  • Bloodletting
  • Insane asylums
  • Philipe Pinel (1745-1826)
  • Moral therapy
  • Benjamin Rush (1745-1813)
  • Dorothea Dix (1802-1887)

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  • Psychotherapy
  • The treatment of psychological disorders through
    psychological means generally involving verbal
    interaction with a professional therapist
  • Eclectic orientation

5
THE PSYCHOANALYTIC ORIENTATION
  • The Nature of Psychoanalysis
  • Psychoanalysis
  • A type of psychotherapy, developed by Sigmund
    Freud, aimed at uncovering the unconscious causes
    of psychological disorders.

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  • Techniques in Psychoanalysis
  • Analysis of free associations
  • therapist interprets the underlying meaning of
    the clients uncensored reports of anything that
    comes to mind
  • Analysis of resistances
  • therapist interprets client behaviors that
    interfere with therapeutic progress toward
    uncovering unconscious conflicts
  • Analysis of dreams
  • therapist interprets the symbolic, manifest
    content of dreams to reveal their true, latent
    content to the client

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  • Analysis of transference
  • therapist interprets the feelings expressed by
    the client toward the therapist as being
    indicative of the feelings typically expressed by
    the client toward important people in his or her
    personal life.
  • Positive transference
  • Client expresses feelings of approval and
    affection toward the therapist
  • Negative transference
  • Client expresses feelings of disapproval and
    rejection towards therapist

8
THE BEHAVIORAL ORIENTATION
  • Behavior therapy
  • The therapeutic application of the principles of
    learning to change maladaptive behaviors

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Classical Conditioning Therapies
  • Counterconditioning
  • Technique that applies the principles of
    classical conditioning to replace unpleasant
    emotional responses to stimuli with more pleasant
    ones

10
  • Systematic desensitization (Joseph Wolpe 1958)
  • A form of counterconditioning that trains the
    client to maintain a state of relaxation in the
    presence of imagined anxiety-inducing stimuli.
  • In vivo desensitization
  • A form of counterconditioning that trains the
    client to maintain a state of relaxation in the
    presence of anxiety-inducing stimuli

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  • Aversion therapy
  • A form of behavior therapy that inhibits
    maladaptive behavior by pairing a stimulus that
    normally elicits a maladaptive response with an
    unpleasant stimulus

12
Operant-Conditioning Therapies
  • Positive Reinforcement
  • Token economy
  • Uses tokens as positive reinforcers in programs
    designed to promote desirable behaviors, with the
    tokens later used to purchase desired items or
    privileges.

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  • Punishment
  • Extinction
  • Flooding
  • An extinction procedure in which a phobic client
    is exposed to a stimulus that evokes intense
    anxiety
  • Imaginal flooding
  • Hold in mind image of feared object
  • In vivo flooding
  • Placed in actual feared situation

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Social-Learning Therapies
  • Participant modeling
  • Client learns to perform more adaptive behaviors
    by first observing the therapist model the
    desired behaviors.

16
THE COGNITIVE ORIENTATION
  • Changes in thinking, produces changes in
    maladaptive emotions and behaviors
  • Aka cognitive-behavior therapies

17
  • Rational-Emotive Behavior Therapy (R-E-B-T)
  • Developed by Albert Ellis, treats psychological
    disorders by forcing the client to give up
    irrational beliefs
  • A-B-C theory of emotion
  • A activating event
  • B irrational belief
  • C emotional consequences

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  • Cognitive Therapy
  • Developed by Aaron Beck, aims at eliminating
    exaggerated negative beliefs about oneself, the
    world, or the future.
  • Socratic technique

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HUMANISTIC ORIENTATION
  • Stresses present not the past
  • Conscious not unconscious
  • Subjective mental experience not objective
    environmental circumstances
  • Expression of emotion rather than control

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  • Person-Centered Therapy
  • Developed by Carl Rogers, helps clients find
    their own answers to their problems
  • Non-directive
  • Facilitate self-actualization
  • Providing climate in which clients can be
    themselves
  • Humanistic assumptions
  • Accepting their true feelings

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  • Tools of the trade
  • Reflection of feelings
  • Active listener, therapeutic mirror
  • Genuine
  • Concerned, open, sincere
  • Accurate empathy
  • Words and actions indicate true understanding
  • Unconditional positive regard
  • Warm accepting manner, non-judgmental

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THE BIOPSYCHOLOGICAL ORIENTATION
  • Psychosurgery
  • The treatment of psychological disorders by
    destroying brain tissue.
  • 1935, Portuguese neurologist Egas Moniz
  • Almeida Lima
  • Prefrontal leucotomy
  • Walter Freeman and James Watts 1936
  • Transorbital leucotomy
  • 1979, 35,000 mental patients in United States
  • Rarely used today
  • Unpredictable effects
  • Advent of drug therapy

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  • Electroconvulsive Therapy
  • Uses brief electrical currents to induce brain
    seizures in victims of major depression
  • Benjamin Rush and shock therapy
  • Ladislas von Meduna and Manfred Sakel
  • camphor
  • Insulin overdoses
  • 1938, Ugo Cerletti
  • Treatment of choice for people for depressed
    people in imminent danger of committing suicide.
  • Stimulates norepinephrine
  • Causes retrograde anmesia

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  • Drug Therapy
  • Antianxiety Drugs (anxiolytics)
  • Used to treat anxiety disorders
  • Tranquilizers
  • Benzodiazepines
  • Xanax (alprazolam)
  • Valium (diazepam)
  • Stimulating receptors in the brain that enhance
    the effects of the neurotransmitter GABA
    (inhibits brain activity)
  • Drowsiness, depression and dependence
  • BuSpar (buspirone)
  • not as many side effects, increases serotonin
    levels in the brain
  • Take everyday

29
  • Antidepressant Drugs
  • Psychoactive drugs that are used to treat major
    depression
  • MAO inhibitors Nardil
  • Used to treat tuberculosis
  • Blocking enzymes that breakdown neurotransmitters
    such as serotonin and norepinephrine
  • Causes high blood pressure

30
  • Tricyclic antidepressants
  • Elavil (amitriptyline), Tofranil (imipramine) and
    Anafranil (clomipramine)
  • Preventing reuptake
  • 2-4 weeks to have an effect

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  • Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs)
  • Prevents reuptake as well
  • Zoloft (sertraline), Paxil (paroxetine) and
    Prozac (fluoxetine)
  • Less side effects than tricyclic
  • Recovery rates for serious cases of depression
    higher with combined therapy
  • Nausea, diarrhea, anxiety, insomnia and loss of
    sexual desire and response

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  • Atypical antidepressants
  • Wellbutrin (bupropion), Effexor (venlafaxine),
    Serzone (nefazodone), Lexapro (escitalopram) and
    Cymbalta (duloxetine)
  • Dopamine and norepinephrine systems
  • Heightened sexual interest and response
  • Curbs nicotine cravings
  • Also used for adult ADD
  • No effect if not depressed
  • Works on a variety of disorders

33
  • Antimania Drugs
  • Used to treat bipolar disorder
  • Lithium carbonate
  • 1940s, John Cade
  • 50 relapse within 3 months when taken off drug
  • Seizures, brain damage and irregular heart
    rhythms
  • Tegretol, Depakote (divalproex), Topamax, and
    Lamictal (lamotrigine)
  • Effects calcium on neuronal membranes
  • Work on serotonin

34
  • Antipsychotic Drugs (neuroleptics)
  • Used to treat schizophrenia
  • Snakeroot plant in India
  • Reserpine
  • Caused depression and low blood pressure
  • 1950s phenothiazines
  • Thorazine (chlorpromazine)
  • Haldol (haloperidol)
  • Block receptor sites for the neurotransmitter
    dopamine

35
  • Tardive dyskinesia
  • Grimacing, lip smacking, tongue thrusting and
    limb flailing.
  • Atypical neuroleptics
  • Clozaril (clozapine), Risperdal (risperidone),
    Zyprexa (olanzapine), Seroquel (quetiapine),
    Geodon (ziprasidone) and Abilify (aripiprazole)
  • Agranulocytosis Loss of white blood cells
  • Alterations in serotonin transmissions
  • Work on subsets of dopamine neurons

36
THE SOCIAL-RELATIONS ORIENTATION
  • Group Therapy
  • 1905 Joseph Pratt Boston physician
  • Jacob Moreno
  • More people, less time, less cost
  • Encouragement from others with similar problems
  • Try out new behaviors
  • Allows therapist to see clients interactions

37
  • Social Skills Training
  • Behavioral group therapy that improves the
    clients social relationships by enhancing her or
    his interpersonal skills
  • Assertiveness training
  • Teaches clients to express their feelings
    constructively
  • Self-Help Groups
  • 1950s Carl Rogers and encounter groups
  • Alcoholics Anonymous

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  • Family therapy
  • Treatment of two or more individuals from the
    same family
  • Various approaches
  • For example
  • Couples therapy
  • Improving communication between partners
  • Various approaches
  • For example

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