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Critical Aspects of psychotherapy

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Chinese Traditional Medicine. acupuncture. herbs. astrology. Feng Shui. Beliefs/attitudes/practices ... Kleumann 1977 mental illness great stigma for the chinese ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Critical Aspects of psychotherapy


1
Critical Aspects of psychotherapy
  • Multicultural Aspects of Therapy

2
This lecture will consider
  • Historical perspective
  • counselling/psychotherapy in society today
  • western theories
  • non-western helping/healing
  • bereavement

3
Historical perspectives
  • 1554 West Africans in London
  • 1770 18,000 black slaves
  • 1851 727,326 Irish immigrants
  • 1880 60,000 Jewish immigrants
  • 1947 120,000 Polish immigrants
  • Commonwealth
  • Vietnamese, Eastern European

4
Counselling/psychotherapy today
  • Listening
  • empathy
  • caring
  • training
  • professional bodies (BPS, BACP)
  • Relate, Samaritans, Drugline, Childline

5
Western theories
  • Philosophy
  • medicine
  • psychiatry
  • psychology
  • counselling/psychotherapy
  • Freud Jung Adler Klein Beck Ellis
    Meichenbaum Rogers Maslow

6
Non-western helping/healing
  • Religion/philosophies
  • alternative/complimentary therapies
  • beliefs/attitudes/practices

7
Religions/philosophies
  • Judeo-Christian
  • Islam
  • Hindu
  • Buddhist
  • Sikh
  • Rastafarian
  • Pagan

8
Alternative/complimentary
  • Reflexology
  • osteopathy
  • chiropractic
  • aromatherapy
  • Reiki
  • Iridology
  • shiatsu

9
Alternative/complimentary (2)
  • Chinese Traditional Medicine
  • acupuncture
  • herbs
  • astrology
  • Feng Shui

10
Beliefs/attitudes/practices
  • Gender
  • pain
  • diet/nutrition
  • rituals
  • normal/abnormal

11
culture
  • Many definitions shared social-psychological
    nexus of beliefs and values, which provides
    guidelines for ones actions and gives meaning to
    their actions
  • Sharma (1996)
  • transcultural therapy-relationship/process in
    which therapist/client belong to different
    cultures (ibid)

12
Mental illness culture
  • culture implicitly and explicitly defines social
    psychological reality Sohan 1996
  • therefore is behaviour acceptable/unacceptable?
  • Marsella 1985 states that cultures vary in their
    perceptions of reality
  • non-western groups- mystical states,
    depersonalisation, visions deviant belief more
    tolerated

13
Cultural definitions
  • Unacceptable/deviant behaviours may be due to
  • genetics/biochemical imbalance
  • supernatural
  • deficient diet
  • socio-economic conditions

14
Culture therapy
  • Interventions may in some way be suggested by the
    culture
  • immoral behaviour-church attendance
  • sorcery/evil spirits-certain individuals
    responsible for therapeutic role

15
stigma
  • Kleumann 1977 mental illness great stigma for the
    chinese
  • Rock, 1982, British females, emotions then
    somatic symptoms
  • Indian/Pakistani females, somatization

16
Bereavement
  • Arie 1981, death treated with indifference in
    ancient times
  • emotional reactions increased in the 17th century
  • control of emotional displays
  • 1800 death seen as peaceful and pleasant

17
Western death customs
  • Death customs in the western worlds emphasize
    denial
  • mourning customs no-longer upheld
  • no pause to ark the death of a person
  • life carries on
  • efforts to deny death are not working
  • hopes and miracles pursued

18
Life above death
  • Person who is dying is expected to be as cheerful
    as possible and involved in life
  • this gets carried over into the mourning
    process-there is no set ritual
  • mourn.but not for too long

19
Is grief normal?
  • Grief Worder, 1991 normal reaction to loss
  • mourning process is the process grieving person
    goes through
  • bereavement is adaptation to loss
  • mourning is a cultural response to grief

20
  • 1917 Freud stated grief was not pathological,
    overcome after a time, interfering with it was
    useless possibly harmful
  • 1940 Klein, mourner goes through a transitory
    manic/depressive state and overcomes it

21
How do people cope?
  • Lindemann 1941, normal reaction to a distressing
    situation
  • symptoms waves of physical distress lasting 20
    minutes to 1 hour
  • SOB, sighing, empty feeling in stomach, weakness,
    tension, poor appetite, feelings of unreality,
    withdrawal from others preoccupations with image
    of deceased

22
  • Thoughts of negligence, anger, guilt
  • restlessness
  • length of grief reaction is dependant upon a
    persons success in completing grief work
  • Marris 1958 Widows in London inability to
    acknowledge loss
  • Gorer 1965 n80, 15/never forgot, never get over
    loss

23
  • Parkes 1972 griefprice one pays for love,grief
    and joy are both parts of life
  • Lopata 1973, 20 not over husbands death, did
    not expect to get over it
  • Glick Weiss Parkes 1974 men women respond
    differently, men lost a part of themselves.
    Women felt abandoned

24
  • Bell 1971, older widows more problems than
    widowers
  • women more financial hardships
  • less opportunity to remarry
  • loss of role of wife more important to them
    than that of husband for men

25
1985 Obershaw myths of grieving
  • Not something people get over
  • people get through it by working at it
  • not wait for time to heal
  • doesnt think that people go through demarcated
    stages of grief
  • no steady forward movement

26
stages
  • Pollock, 1961 x 2
  • Westberg 1973 x 10
  • Engel 1961 x 6 shock disbelief developing
    awareness restitution resolving the loss
    idealisation the outcome

27
Stages of dying
  • Kuber-Ross 1969
  • denial-it cant be happening to me
  • bargaining just one more chance
  • anger life is unfair
  • depression it is hopeless
  • acceptance peace readiness to move one

28
Briese Farra 1984
  • Grief theory based on phases is misleading
  • no-one goes through them sequentially
  • proposed alternate way more acceptable to men,
    less emphasis on emotions
  • based on life components
  • self others work community transcendence
  • dependent on stresses/responsibilities/priorities
  • invest more in some components

29
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