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Abnormal Psychology

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Attempt to help a person improve his/her psychological well-being and. Help one better adjust to life's situations ... Psychodynamic therapies: ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Abnormal Psychology


1
Abnormal Psychology
  • Methods of Treatment

2
Psychotherapy
  • Def. general term given all forms of therapy
    which
  • Attempt to help a person improve his/her
    psychological well-being and
  • Help one better adjust to lifes situations
  • There are over 250 psychotherapies some good
    and some bad
  • E.g. Primal scream therapy

3
Mental Health Professionals
  • Clinical Psychologists trained in assessing,
    diagnosing and treating psych. Disorders
  • Psychiatrists Doctors who have earned medical
    degrees and completed a residency in psychiatry

4
Multicultural Issues in Psychotherapy
  • Are therapists properly trained to work with a
    clientele from different cultural and ethnic
    backgrounds than his/her own?
  • Usually
  • And much more so than in the past

5
Therapies
  • Therapists use one of two approaches
  • Eclectic approach
  • Specific theoretical approach

6
Psychoanalysis
  • Founder Sigmund Freud
  • Key belief Psych. problems are result of
  • Childhood experiences
  • Repressed impulses
  • Conflicts between structures in the unconscious
    mind (id, ego and superego)

7
Psychoanalysis
  • Therapists job
  • Help the client gain self-insight
  • Insight figuring out where the persons problem
    stems from
  • Techniques that unearth the past
  • Free association (resistance)
  • Interpretation

8
Techniques Used to Unearth the Past
  • Techniques (cont.)
  • Transference
  • Dream analysis
  • Dreams the royal road to the unconscious
  • Manifest and latent content

9
Criticisms of Psychoanalysis
  • Long and costly
  • Can go on for years, several sessions/wk
  • Useless for treating severe disorders
  • Psychodynamic therapies
  • Similar to psychoanalysis but lasts for several
    weeks to months, 1 session/wk, done face to face

10
Cognitive Therapies
  • Therapies which teach people new, more adaptive
    ways of thinking/acting
  • Based on the assumption that thoughts intervene
    between events and our emotional reactions

11
Rational Emotive Behavioral Therapy (REBT)
  • Founded by Albert Ellis
  • Vigorously challenges peoples illogical,
    self-defeating beliefs
  • Figure 15.3
  • We must rid ourselves of irrational beliefs
  • Replace them with rational beliefs

12
Rational Emotive Behavioral Therapy (REBT)
  • Ellis therapy tries to show how absurd these
    self-defeating thoughts are
  • Challenges the client
  • Wheres the proof for your beliefs?
  • Shows the client that s/he is in control of what
    s/he is thinking
  • Client is taught to monitor beliefs/emotions
  • Substitute real, positive beliefs

13
Cognitive Therapy
  • Founded by Aaron Beck
  • Particularly effective in treating depression
  • Similar to REBT
  • Clients irrational beliefs are confronted
  • Homework assignments are often used

14
Successes/Criticisms of Cognitive Therapies
  • Both Becks and Ellis therapies work well in
    treating many disorders
  • Both have been criticized for concentrating on
    the present while ignoring potential causes from
    the past and/or that which is in the unconscious
    mind

15
Humanistic Therapy
  • Aim raise self-fulfillment by helping people
    grow in self-awareness and self-acceptance
  • Focus is on
  • The present instead of the past
  • Conscious thoughts
  • Taking responsibility for ones actions
  • Promoting growth instead of curing illness

16
Client-centered Therapy
  • Founded by Carl Rogers
  • Most widely used humanistic therapy
  • Brief summary uses techniques within a genuine,
    accepting, empathic environment in order to
    facilitate a clients growth
  • A person will not be blocked from
    self-fulfillment if s/he is in a state of
    congruence

17
Techniques Employed in Therapy
  • Active listening
  • Genuineness
  • Unconditional positive regard
  • Empathy

18
Behavior Therapies
  • Therapies that apply learning principles to
    eliminate unwanted behaviors
  • Goal replace problem thoughts/behaviors with
    constructive ones
  • Belief disorders are thoughts/behaviors learned
    through reinforcement and or modeling

19
Behavioral Techniques
  • Systematic desensitization Fig. 15-4
  • Gradual exposure
  • Modeling
  • Effective in social skills and assertiveness
    training
  • Aversion therapy
  • Associates an unpleasant state with an unwanted
    behavior
  • E.g Alcohol/nausea inducing pill, rapid puffing

20
Behavioral Techniques
  • Operant conditioning techniques
  • Use of reinforcement to maintain desired
    behaviors
  • Token economy in institutions
  • Removal of a reinforcer to eliminate undesirable
    behaviors
  • Taking away privileges in the hopes the person
    will stop the unwanted behavior

21
Biomedical TherapiesDrug Therapy
  • Psychopharmacology study of the effects of
    drugs on the mind and behavior
  • Antianxiety drugs
  • Depress CNS activity, thereby reducing tension
    and anxiety
  • When used properly, can help a person learn to
    cope with fear-triggering stimuli

22
Biomedical TherapiesDrug Therapy
  • Antipsychotic drugs
  • Dampen responsiveness to irrelevant stimuli
  • Hallucinations, delusions, paranoia, etc.
  • Is believed these drugs work by blocking dopamine
    and serotonin receptors
  • Tardive dyskinesia (eye blinking, lip smacking,
    facial grimaces, involuntary muscle movements)

23
Biomedical TherapiesDrug Therapy
  • Mood stabilizers antidepressants
  • Lithium provides an effective treatment for up to
    50 of people with bipolar disorder
  • Antidepressants
  • Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs)
    blocks reuptake of serotonin, increasing
    availability
  • Monamine oxidase inhibitors (MAO inhibitors)
    prevents breakdown of norepinephrine and
    serotonin in the synapses, increasing availability

24
Electroconvulsive Therapy(ECT)
  • Video History of Shock Therapy
  • Biomedical therapy for severely depressed
    patients
  • A brief electric current is sent through the
    brain of an anesthetized patient
  • Psychiatrist shocks brain for lt 1 second
  • Within 30 min., the patient awakens, but is a
    little confused

25
Electroconvulsive Therapy(ECT)
  • Is used only as a last resort
  • After 3-5 treatments/wk, for 2-4 weeks, about 80
    show a marked improvement
  • Without noticeable brain damage
  • Why does it work?

26
Psychosurgery The Prefrontal Lobotomy
  • Egaz Moniz founded the operation in 1936
  • Received the Nobel Peace Prize in 1949
  • Was once used to calm uncontrollable emotional or
    violent patients
  • Done by cutting the nerves that connect the
    frontal lobes to the thalamus and hypothalamus
    (emotion-controlling centers of the brain)

27
Psychosurgery The Prefrontal Lobotomy
  • Today, lobotomies are extremely rare and are
    usually used to stop uncontrollable seizures,
    depression, OCD, etc.
  • Doctors today are able to deactivate specific
    nerve clusters, thereby causing less damage
  • Like ECT, it is used mainly as a last resort
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