Therapy
How can you help people?
What types of psychological
therapies are there?
Psychoanalysis
Humanistic therapy
Behavior therapy
Cognitive therapy
What is psychoanalysis?
Sigmund Freud
Assumes problems are created by childhood
memories, impulses and conflicts
Psychoanalysis brings these childhood
memories and conflicts into consciousness
to be “worked through” and resolved.
Psychoanalysis (cont.)
Therapist uses “free association” (say what
comes to mind) and dream analysis
(interpretation of latent content of dreams)
to get at repressed impulses.
Problems with psychoanalysis
– Difficult to determine effectiveness
scientifically
– Too lengthy - takes years with several sessions
a week.
What is humanistic therapy?
Client Centered Therapy
– One type of humanistic therapy
– Carl Rogers
– Emphasizes your potential for self fulfillment
– Focus on the present, not the past
– Conscious not unconscious
– The patient can discover their own ways of
dealing with their difficulties.
Client Centered Therapy (cont.)
Unconditional positive regard
– I accept what you say without judgment
Active listening
– Paraphrasing -Restate the ideas in your own
words.
Invite clarification - Do you have an
example? I want to understand.
Reflect feelings - “That sounds frustrating?”
Client Centered Therapy (cont.)
Results
– As therapist reflects unconditional positive
regard (acceptance), the clients begins to accept
themselves and feel valued.
Do you remember?
What does psychoanalysis focus on?
What strategies does psychoanalysis use?
What does client centered therapy focus on?
What strategies does client centered therapy
use?
What is behavior therapy?
Views problems as learned behavior, not
based on unresolved childhood conflicts
Applies learning principles to eliminate
unwanted behavior.
Example of behavior therapy
Classical conditioning
Bedwetting alarm pad
What is systematic desensitization?
You can not be both relaxed and have high
anxiety
Paring relaxation with what creates fear
– Spider example
Systematic Desensitization
Spider example
What is aversive conditioning?
Associates negative behavior with negative
feelings
Mother spanks child for running into the
street
Alcohol & nausea (Antabuse)
Aversive conditioning
What is operant conditioning?
Token economy
– Reward for positive behavior
– When patient makes his bed, he gets a token
(plastic coin) that can be exchanged for candy,
T.V. viewing, etc.
What is cognitive therapy?
Cognitive therapy
Cognitive therapy
What is cognitive-Behavioral
therapy?
Assumes: Thinking effects feelings
Event - your mind - your response
E.g. Self-blame and overgeneralization of
negative events creates depression.
Do you remember?
What is an example of :
– Classical conditioning in therapy?
– Operant conditioning in therapy?
– Systematic desensitization in therapy?
– Aversive conditioning in therapy?
– Cognitive therapy
What is group and family therapy?
Group therapy
–
–
–
–
6 - 10 people
Often as effective as individual therapy
Cheaper
Allows a social content
• Feedback from others
• You are not alone
Group and Family Therapy
(Cont.)
Support groups
– Not quite the same as group therapy
– No “therapist” - members support each other with a
director
Family therapy
– No person is an island
– The family is the patient - not just the person with the
“symptoms”.
What are biomedical therapies?
Drugs
– E.g. Anti-psychotics and
anti-depressants
Electroconvulsive therapy
(ECT)
– Depression
Evaluating Therapies
How effective are therapies?
Regression toward the mean
– Will people get better anyway?
– The tendency for unusual events to return to normal
How effective are therapies?
Placebo effect
– You get what you expect
– If you think something will help, often it does.
Double blind technique
– Used to determine the extent of the placebo effect.
– Separating the direct effect of the drug from the
expectations of its effectiveness.
E.g. Testing antianxiety medication.
Do you remember?
What is an example of:
– Family therapy?
– Biomedical therapy?
– Electroconvulsive therapy?
How will “regression toward the mean” will
make patients better without effective therapy?
How will the “placebo effect” will make
patients better without effective therapy?