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Cognitive Therapy

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Cognitive Therapy PSYC E-2488 12/3 and ... Treatment of Anxiety: - Model suggests how cognitive, social, and behavioral factors interact to produce problem they face. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Cognitive Therapy


1
Cognitive Therapy
  • PSYC E-2488
  • 12/3 and 10/07

2
Exercise 25 minutes
  • Break up into groups of 3-4 members/group
  • Pick an experience that evokes a strong emotional
    reaction among all members
  • Talk among yourselves to build a sufficiently
    dysphoric image that you can share as a group and
    each individually focus on comfortably
  • Pick one of the following psychological processes
    (each group must take a different process)
  • - Mindfulness
  • - Progressive Relaxation
  • - Examining and changing negative cognitions
  • - EMDR
  • Practice the technique for 10 minutes
  • Refocus on the dysphoric image
  • Write down your thoughts and feelings
  • Discuss them as a group

3
Historical Background
  • Introduction
  • 1. Cognitive Revolution
  • - 1956 MIT Symposium on Information processing
  • Seminal works published in the 50s by Jerome
    Bruner (? Narrative/stories), Chomsky (Language
    structures and thought), George Kelly (Personal
    construct therapy), Benjamin Whorf (Language,
    thought, and reality), and Herbert Simon and
    Newell
  • Psychodynamic therapists (see Karen Horney
    neurotic needs) connect with dynamic core
    implicit beliefs and interpersonal schemata and,
    Behaviorists directive, active, brief, empirical.
    And goal focused.
  • Ellis and Beck (both analysts)
  • Trans-cultural adoption (Sweden and China) with
    differences in values about implicit beliefs.
  • Clinical warmth, empathy and positive regard are
    widely accepted as trans-theoretical traits that
    are important in therapy
  • Historical Background
  • 1. Epictetus
  • 2. Michael Mahoney (late) a. Active and
    proactive nature of knowing, learning and
    perception b. Abstract (tacit) gt Concrete
    (explicit) processes in all sentient and sapient
    experience and, c. Learning, knowing, and memory
    are ongoing attempts to organize/re-organize
    experience in their adaptive environmental
    context.

4
Historical Background cond.
  • 3. (my opinion) Chapters authors attempts to
    differentiate psychodynamic and
    cognitive-constructivist models on the basis of
    being goal directed, adaptive, purposive, and
    active, personally meaningful and self-organizing
    reflects partial knowledge of full spectrum of
    psychodynamic history and theory.
  • 4. Contemporary CBT reflects influence of Frankl,
    Adler, Arieti, Freud, and Tolman.
  • - Eschews Drive reduction metaphor and idea of
    defensive functioning and shares the idea of the
    role that psychology has ascribed to cognitive
    processes in etiology of psychopathology
  • - Early contributors are Lazarus, Goldfried,
    Ellis, Beck, Mischel, Mahoney, Meichenbaum, and
    George Kelly
  • (accelerated in the 1970s)
  • - A (antecedents) B (eliefs/behaviors) C
    (onsequences)
  • - BASIC ID (Lazarus)

5
Assumptions of Cognitive Therapy
  • 1. It is a school of thought
  • 2. Basic assumptions
  • - How individuals understand events and
    circumstances determines how they feel and
    behave
  • - Interpretation of events is active and
    ongoing
  • - Individuals develop idiosyncratic belief
    systems that guide their behavior and determine
    what is stressful
  • - Stressors contribute to maladaptive cognitive
    functioning and activate dysfunctional
    strategies
  • - Cognitive specificity hypothesis suggests
    that clinical syndromes and states reflect
    specific content in belief systems and cognitive
    processes
  • 3. Foundation of CT is the belief or meaning
    system Both CS and automatic (stream of
    consciousness)
  • 4. Cognitive processes, emotions, and behavior
    are intertwined in biological and social
    functioning modes and affective schema are
    current ways of thinking about older concepts.

6
The Basic Cognitive Therapy Model
  • 1. The Cognitive Triad Virtually all patients
    have a view of themselves, the world, and their
    future which is reflected in the distortions of
    beliefs reflecting normal concerns (e.g.,
    depressed individuals are negative anxious
    individuals see the world as threatening)
  • 2. Schemata Originated with Kant and Piaget.
  • - Organized, tacit cognitive structures stored
    in memory generalizations from specific
    experiences and prototypes for focusing and
    deriving/giving meaning to incoming experience
  • - They influence attention, encoding, retrieval,
    and inference
  • - They serve as prototypes for experiences and,
    abstract events for assimilation and
    accommodation to novel experience
  • - We have self-schemata developed in childhood
    that had/have an adaptive function
  • Cognitive Distortions (see K. Horneys neurotic
    needs) Dichotomous thinking, mind reading,
    emotional reasoning, personalization,
    overgeneralization, catastrophizing, Should
    statements, and selective abstraction

7
Evidence for Cognitive Models of Depression
  • 1. Early studies showed benefit gt waiting list,
    no therapy, BT, pharmacotherapy (?s raised), but
    used self report of mood and less severely
    depressed patients
  • 2. NIMH (1989-CDCRP) Elkin et al. Medsgt CT, CT
    not appreciatively better than placebo for
    severely depressed not lasting benefits like
    other therapies.
  • 3. Complex on closer look Uneven quality of CT
    administration at several sites and, more
    experienced therapists got better results with
    more severely depressed, that equaled the
    progress of those on meds.
  • 4. Effect may be a function of therapists
    experience.
  • 5. Relapse rates lower, esp. with booster sessions

8
Cognitive Therapy for Other Disorders
  • 1. Useful in understanding and treating PTSD,
    e.g., with respect to ways in which traumatic
    experiences can disrupt cognitive processes or
    schemata and may activate pathological fear
    structures
  • 2. Treatments based on model use a variety of
    approaches to change mental impact of trauma
    discussion of event impact, in vivo exposure,
    cognitive restructuring (a variety of
    techniques), relaxation training and anxiety mgt.
  • 3. CBT helps and is superior to waiting list and
    supportive therapy. List of techniques is useful,
    relative to list and supportive therapy groups.

9
The Practice of Therapy
  • 1. The Therapeutic Relationship in CT
  • 2. Assessment and Treatment Planning
  • Assessment Techniques
  • Assessment of Vulnerability Factors
  • 3. Specific Interventions
  • Cognitive Techniques
  • Idiosyncratic Meaning
  • Questioning the evidence
  • Rational Responding
  • Examining options and alternatives

10
The Practice of Therapy cond.
  • 3. cond.
  • - Decatastrophizing
  • - Fantasized Consequences
  • - Advantages and Disadvantages
  • - Turning Adversity to Advantage
  • - Guided Association/Discovery
  • - Use of Exaggeration or Paradox
  • - Scaling
  • - Externalization of Voices
  • - Self-instruction
  • - Thought Stopping
  • - Distraction
  • - Direct Disputation
  • - Labeling of Distortions

11
The Practice of Therapy cond.
  • 3. cond
  • - Developing Replacement Imagery
  • - Bibliotherapy
  • - Behavioral Techniques
  • - Activity Scheduling
  • - Mastery, Pleasure, and Social Ratings
  • - Social Skills or Assertiveness Training
  • - Guided Task Assignments
  • - Behavioral Rehearsal/Role Playing
  • - In Vivo Exposure
  • - Relaxation Training
  • - Homework

12
The Practice of Therapy cond.
  • 4. Common Errors in Conducting CT
  • - Inadequate socialization of patient to
    model
  • - Failure to develop sufficient problem list
    and share it with the
    patient
  • - Not assigning appropriate homework and
    following up
  • - Premature emphasis on identifying
    schemata
  • - Therapist impatience and overly
    directive
  • - Premature introduction of rational
    techniques before adequate formulation is
    completed
  • - Lack of attention to developing
    rapport and a working relationship with
    non-specific factors
  • - Not attending to the
    counter-transference.

13
The Practice of Therapy cond.
  • 5. Termination
  • - When patient report, assessments, feedback
    from others, shows durable higher level
    adaptive functioning, termination can be
    considered
  • - Final phase includes consolidation of gains
    and relapse prevention
  • - 12-15 sessions often effective for completion
    of treatment
  • - 2-3 years of treatment can be productive if
    underlying schema are examined
  • - Termination is accomplished gradually by
    increasing time between sessions, making
    provisions for emergency sessions and examining
    feelings about ending the process (esp. in
    patients for whom loss and separation have been
    issues).

14
The Practice of Therapy cond.
  • 6. Noncompliance (resistance)
  • - 1-14 (occur in permutations and
    combinations)
  • - Failure to validate patients experience
  • - Limited coping capacity
  • - Lack of therapist skill
  • - Environmental or social stressors interfere
    with change
  • - Patients fear of failure
  • - Fear of negative consequences of changing
  • - Congruencies between patient and therapist
    distortions
  • - Poor socialization to the model
  • - Secondary gain fro dysfunctional behavior
  • - Lack of working alliance
  • - Poor timing of interventions
  • - Failure to help patient maintain a
    consistent, stable view of themselves (schema
    protection)
  • - Failure to address patients
    justifying or imperative beliefs
  • - Failure to develop a problem
    list or share a rationale.

15
Treatment Applicability
  • 1. Cognitive Specificity Hypothesis
  • - Emotional states and clinical disorders can
    be distinguished on the basis of their
    characteristics concerns and behaviors that
    mediate the disorders and can be seen as focus of
    treatment
  • - Cognitive Triad, perceptual and memory
    biases, negativistic attributional style and
    problem solving deficits
  • - Depressed Significantly flawed, incompetent,
    future bleak, others are uncaring, negativistic
    expectations
  • - Anxious World is threatening and they cant
    cope with it
  • - CT focuses on providing a patient with a
    rationale and techniques to change their
    specific core constellation of beliefs,
    attributions, expectations, and skill deficits

16
Treatment Applicability cond.
  • 2. Treatment of Anxiety
  • - Model suggests how cognitive, social, and
    behavioral factors interact to produce problem
    they face.
  • - Existing memories, beliefs,
    schemata, and assumptions contribute to taking
    an adaptive response to perceived threat and
    distorting it
  • - Treatment consists of re-examining
    cognitive underpinnings, developing appropriate
    coping skills,
  • enhancing perception of personal efficacy,
    de-catastrophizing perceived threats, and
    discouraging avoidance and withdrawal.
  • 3. Personality Disorders An enduring pattern of
    dysfunctions in thought, perception and
    interpersonal relatedness, that are relatively
    inflexible and occur across situations
  • Consistent over time
  • Have constellations of cognitive concerns and
    processes
  • Dependent PD continually seeks relationships with
    others, fears loss of them, and feels depressed
    and anxious when deprived of others support
  • Schizoid World and others are dangerous and Ill
    avoid them
  • Beliefs once had functional reality, are tacit
    and hard to examine, patient often seeks help for
    other issues
  • Focus of treatment is on underlying schemata and
    is more comprehensive and long-term
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