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Therapy, Psychopharmacology, & Biomedical Treatments

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1 Therapy, Psychopharmacology, & Biomedical Treatments
PSYCHOLOGY READ Chapter 17 Therapy, Psychopharmacology, & Biomedical Treatments

2 ESSENTIAL QUESTION: What techniques do psychologists and psychiatrists use to treat psychological disorders? GPS STANDARD: SSPVB3- The student will identify abnormal behavior and treatment. e.) compare the biomedical, psychoanalytical, cognitive, and behavioral approaches to the treatment of psychological disorders.

3 Therapy Psychotherapy
an emotionally charged, confiding interaction between a trained therapist and someone who suffers from psychological difficulties this includes talking about the patient’s problems and exploring new ways of thinking and acting

4 Therapy Eclectic Approach
an approach to psychotherapy that, depending on the client’s problems, uses techniques from various forms of therapy although the eclectic therapist may lean toward one treatment approach, they borrow methods from other types of therapy as well

5 Therapy: Basic features of treatment: a client (or patient)
a therapist who is accepted as capable of helping the client the establishment of a special relationship between the client and therapist that includes trust and honesty

6 Therapy: Basic features of treatment
Basic features of treatment continued: all forms of treatment are based on some theory about the causes of the client’s problems the theory in turn leads to special procedures dealing with the client’s problems

7 Therapists and their Training
Clinical psychologists Most are psychologists with a Ph.D. and expertise in research, assessment, and therapy, supplemented by a supervised internship About half work in agencies and institutions, half in private practice

8 Therapists and their Training
Clinical or Psychiatric Social Worker A two-year Master of Social Work graduate program plus postgraduate supervision prepares some social workers to offer psychotherapy, mostly to people with everyday personal and family problems About half have earned the National Association of Social Workers’ designation of clinical social worker

9 Therapists and their Training
Counselors Pastoral counselors provide counseling to countless people Abuse counselors work with substance abusers and with spouse and child abusers and their victims Marriage and family counselors specialize in problems arising from family relations

10 Therapists and their Training
Psychiatrists Physicians who specialize in the treatment of psychological disorders Not all psychiatrists have had extensive training in psychotherapy, but as M.D.s they can prescribe medications. Thus, they tend to see those with the most serious problems Many have a private practice

11 Biomedical Therapies- antipsychotics/neuroleptics
ESSENTIAL QUESTION: What drugs are used to treat psychological disorders? What are some of their negative side effects? GPS STANDARD: SSPVB3- The student will identify abnormal behavior and treatment. e.) compare the biomedical, psychoanalytical, cognitive, and behavioral approaches to the treatment of psychological disorders.

12 Psychopharmacology Psychopharmacology study of the effects of drugs on mind and behavior

13 Psychopharmacology Neuroleptics (or antipsychotics)
the early 1950s saw the introduction of a new group of drugs that revolutionized the treatment of severe mental disorders these drugs dramatically reduced the intensity of such symptoms as hallucinations, delusions, paranoid suspiciousness, and disordered thinking in many mental patients

14 Psychopharmacology Neuroleptics cont…
these drugs were especially helpful for patients with schizophrenia as a result of taking these drugs, many mental patients became better able to take care of themselves thousands of patients were able to leave the mental hospitals as a result of these drugs

15 Psychopharmacology: antipsychotic medications
Thorazine is used for the reduction of symptoms of psychotic disorders such as schizophrenia is also used for the short-term treatment of severe behavioral disorders in children, including explosive hyperactivity and combativeness

16 Psychopharmacology: antipsychotic medications
Thorazine cont… is also used for the “hyperenergetic” phase of manic-depressive illness due to its sedative effects has many side effects such as: dry mouth blurred vision urinary retention dizziness skin pigmentation problems may also cause tardive dyskinesia

17 Psychopharmacology: antipsychotic medications
Thorazine cont… tardive dyskinesia- has effects similar to those of Parkinson’s disease such as: muscle rigidity muscle spasms restlessness tremors slowed movement uncontrollable grotesque twitches in the face & body uncontrollable grotesque thrusting of the tongue

18 Psychopharmacology: antipsychotic medications
Thorazine cont… tardive dyskinesia this side effect is an irreversible disorder of the motor system that appears only after years of neuroleptic use it affects 25 percent of patients who take these drugs in some ways tardive dyskinesia can be far worse than the mental disorder that led to treatment

19 Psychopharmacology: antipsychotic medications
Clozaril is given to people with severe schizophrenia who have failed to respond to other drug treatments it is not a cure but can help some people with schizophrenia return to a more normal life does not cause movement disorder tardive dyskinesia

20 Psychopharmacology: antipsychotic medications
Clozaril may cause another disorder called agranulocytosis in about 2% of the patients that take it Agranulocytosis- is a potentially fatal disorder characterized by a loss of white blood cells and the consequent susceptibility to infectious disease weekly blood tests are required to detect early signs of this disease

21 Psychopharmacology: antipsychotic medications
Haldol also used to treat schizophrenia and other psychotic episodes prescribed to control tics (uncontrollable muscle contractions of the face arms and shoulders) also helps to control uncontrollable utterances (talking) associated with Tourette’s syndrome

22 Psychopharmacology: antipsychotic medications
Haldol cont… also used to treat children with severe behavior problems such as hyperactivity and combativeness some doctors also prescribe Haldol to relieve severe nausea or vomiting also used to treat drug problems such as LSD flashbacks or PCP intoxication

23 Biomedical Therapies The emptying of U.S. mental hospitals

24 Antidepressants ESSENTIAL QUESTION: What drugs are used to treat psychological disorders? What are some of their negative side effects? GPS STANDARD: SSPVB3- The student will identify abnormal behavior and treatment. e.) compare the biomedical, psychoanalytical, cognitive, and behavioral approaches to the treatment of psychological disorders.

25 Psychopharmacology: antidepressants
soon after antipsychotic drugs appeared, antidepressants were developed these drugs were designed to relieve the symptoms of depression

26 Psychopharmacology: antidepressants
about 60 to 70 percent of patients who take these drugs show: improved mood greater physical activity increased appetite more deep sleep

27 Psychopharmacology: antidepressants
although these drugs have an immediate effect on neurotransmitters (usually increasing serotonin or norepinephrine) their effects on depressive symptoms do not occur until one to three weeks after the dosage begins

28 Psychopharmacology: antidepressants
MAO-I (monoamine oxidase inhibitors) effective for depression and panic disorder serious side effect of severe hypertension (high blood pressure) if mixed with foods containing tyramine: aged cheeses red wine chicken livers

29 Psychopharmacology: antidepressants
Tricyclics work better than MAO-I(s)in reducing depression tricyclics have fewer side effects and do not raise the blood pressure Side effects of tricyclics include: Sleepiness Dry mouth Dizziness Blurred vision Hypotension (lower blood pressure) Constipation Urinary retention

30 Psychopharmacology: antidepressants
Tricyclics cont…. An extreme side effect of tricyclics is that when they are combined with alcohol it increases the effects of both and the combination of the two can potentially result in the death of the patient

31 Psychopharmacology: antidepressants
SSRIs (selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors) Prozac is the most popular drug among the SSRIs it affects serotonin rather than norepinephrine Prozac was introduced in 1986 and is the most widely prescribed antidepressant in the United States

32 Psychopharmacology: antidepressants
SSRIs (selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors) cont…. Its popularity is due to the fact that it is as effective as the tricyclics and in most cases has fewer side effects 60 to 80 percent of the depressed patients that use Prozac get significant relief from their depression

33 Psychopharmacology: antidepressants
OTHER SSRIs (selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors) Anafranil Luvox Effexor Celexa Paxil Zoloft Wellbutrin

34 Biomedical Therapies

35 Biomedical Therapies

36 Psychopharmacology: herbal remedies
St. John’s Wort The most recent development in the pharmacological treatment of depression is the use of the herbal remedy St. John’s Wort In Germany, where this treatment is paid for by health insurance, it is more popular than Prozac The active ingredient in St. John’s Wort is hypericin Hypericin is a substance thought to enhance serotonin activity in the brain and possibly act just like an MAO-I

37 Psychopharmacology: herbal remedies
St. John’s Wort cont… it has multiple uses: Soothes the digestive system Relieves ulcers and gastritis Treats diarrhea and nausea Works as a sedative, painkiller, a topical analgesic

38 Psychopharmacology: herbal remedies
St. John’s Wort cont… one major side effect is that it causes photosensitivity If a light-skinned animal or human eats the plant exposure to direct sunlight may cause: Dermatitis Inflammation of the mucous membranes Or more toxic reactions

39 Bipolar drugs, anti-anxiety drugs, electroconvulsive therapy
ESSENTIAL QUESTION: What drugs are used to treat psychological disorders? What are some of their negative side effects? GPS STANDARD: SSPVB3- The student will identify abnormal behavior and treatment. e.) compare the biomedical, psychoanalytical, cognitive, and behavioral approaches to the treatment of psychological disorders.

40 Biomedical Therapies Electroconvulsive Therapy (ECT) Psychosurgery
therapy for severely depressed patients in which a brief electric current is sent through the brain of an anesthetized patient Psychosurgery surgery that removes or destroys brain tissue in an effort to change behavior lobotomy now-rare psychosurgical procedure once used to calm uncontrollably emotional or violent patients

41 Electroconvulsive Therapy

42 Psychopharmacology: bipolar disorder
Eskalith (lithium bicarbonate) around 1970, a mineral salt of the element lithium was found to calm manic patients if taken regularly, it prevents both the depression and the mania associated with bipolar disorders

43 Psychopharmacology: bipolar disorder
Lithium bicarbonate (Eskalith) cont… lithium is effective for 80% of manic patients Without lithium, the typical bipolar patient has a manic episode about every 14 months and a depressive episode about every 17 months

44 Psychopharmacology: bipolar disorder
Lithium cont… With lithium attacks of mania occur as rarely as every 9 years

45 Psychopharmacology: bipolar disorder
Lithium cont… The lithium dosage must be exact and carefully controlled Too much lithium causes: Vomiting Nausea Tremors Fatigue Slurred speech With severe overdoses Coma OR Death

46 Psychopharmacology: bipolar disorder
Lithium cont… lithium cannot treat a manic episode in progress because it takes a week or two or regular use before its effects are seen So just like with antidepressants, lithium’s effects probably occur through some long-term adaptation as the nervous system adjusts to the presence of the drug

47 Psychopharmacology: anxiety disorders
Anti-anxiety drugs- used for the treatment of anxiety or insomnia Ativan Valium Librium Rohypnol Klonopin Xanax

48 Anxiety Drugs Many anxiety drugs are in a class of drugs called benzodiazepines Benzodiazepines are dangerous when mixed with alcohol the benzodiazepines became the worldwide drug treatment of choice for anxiety these and the more modern drugs of this drug class continue to be the most widely prescribed and used of all legal drugs

49 Psychopharmacology: anxiety disorders
benzodiazepines cont… benzodiazepines have an immediate calming effect on anxiety and are quite useful in the treatment of generalized anxiety disorder (GAD) and posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). one of the newest of the benzodiazepines is Xanax

50 self-actualization? ESSENTIAL QUESTION:
How do humanistic therapists help their clients overcome the obstacles that prevent them from achieving their full human potential and experience….. self-actualization? GPS STANDARD: SSPVB3- The student will identify abnormal behavior and treatment. e.) compare the biomedical, psychoanalytical, cognitive, and behavioral approaches to the treatment of psychological disorders.

51 Humanistic Therapy Client-Centered Therapy
humanistic therapy developed by Carl Rogers therapist uses techniques such as active listening within a genuine, accepting, empathic environment to facilitate clients’ growth

52 Humanistic Therapy Carl Rogers
Carl Rogers was trained in psychoanalytic methods but he began to question their value and usefulness Rogers disliked being a detached expert observer in the therapy process whose job is to figure out what is wrong with the client

53 Humanistic Therapy Carl Rogers cont…
Rogers became convinced that a less formal approach would be more effective for the client and more comfortable for the therapist Rogers developed a non-directive form of therapy which depends on the client’s own drive toward growth or personal actualization

54 Humanistic Therapy Carl Rogers cont…
Rogers allowed his clients to decide what to talk about and when, without direction, judgment, or interpretation by the therapist which is the main idea behind client-centered therapy

55 Humanistic Therapy Carl Rogers developed client-centered therapy

56 Humanistic Therapy Unconditional Positive Regard
treating the client as a valued person no matter what they say or what they have done the therapist listens without interrupting and accepts everything the client says without evaluating it

57 Humanistic Therapy Unconditional Positive Regard cont…
The therapist need not approve of everything the client says but he or she must accept statement as reflecting a part of the person because they trust their clients to solve their own problems, Rogerian therapists rarely give advice

58 Humanistic Therapy Unconditional Positive Regard cont…
If the therapist gives advice, Rogers believed that this would undermine the human growth potential of the client by subtly implying that they are incompetent to solve their own problems They must be confident that they can solve their own problems and not become dependent on others for help

59 Humanistic Therapy Empathy
Client-centered therapists try to appreciate how the world looks from the client’s point of view This involves far more than saying, “I know what you mean.” The therapist tries to replace their external frame of reference- looking at the patient from the outside- with an internal frame of reference.

60 Humanistic Therapy Empathy cont….
The therapist tries to replace their external frame of reference- looking at the patient from the outside- with an internal frame of reference. The internal frame of reference is characterized by empathy Empathy- the emotional understanding of what the client might be thinking and feeling

61 Humanistic Therapy Client-centered therapy conveys empathy to the client by active listening The therapist: makes eye contact with the client nods in recognition as the client speaks gives other signals of careful attention

62 Humanistic Therapy Active Listening-empathic listening in which the listener echoes, restates, and clarifies

63 Humanistic Therapy Client-centered therapists also use reflection (or mirroring) Reflection- is a paraphrased summary of the client’s words and especially the feelings and meanings that appear to accompany those words Reflection confirms that real communication is going on between the therapist and client

64 Humanistic Therapy Reflection cont….
reflection shows the therapist’s level of interest reflection helps the client perceive and focus on the thoughts and feelings that they are expressing This method helps the client bring important material into the open without the therapist asking disruptive questions which interfere with the client’s thinking process

65 Humanistic Therapy Congruence (a.k.a.- genuineness)
congruence shows consistency between the therapist’s feelings and actions when the therapist’s unconditional positive regard and empathy are genuine, the client is able to see that relationships between people can be built on openness and honesty this will hopefully help the client to become more congruent or genuine in their other relationships

66 ESSENTIAL QUESTION: What techniques does psychoanalysis use to treat and resolve conflicts? GPS STANDARD: SSPVB3- The student will identify abnormal behavior and treatment. e.) compare the biomedical, psychoanalytical, cognitive, and behavioral approaches to the treatment of psychological disorders.

67 Therapy- Psychoanalysis
Psychoanalysis (Freud’s method of treatment) the field of psychotherapy began when Sigmund Freud established the psychoanalytic approach in the late 1800s central to his approach is the assumption that personality and behavior reflects the efforts of the ego (the self) to resolve internal conflicts between our unconscious desires for pleasure and the rules and values of society which tell us what we should and should not do

68 Therapy- Psychoanalysis
Psychoanalysis (Freud’s method of treatment) Psychoanalysis is aimed at understanding the unconscious conflicts and how they affect the client a one-to-one method of studying and treating people a systematic search for relationships between an individual’s life history and their current problems an emphasis on thoughts and emotions during treatment a focus on the patient-therapist relationship

69 Therapy- Psychoanalysis
Psychoanalysis cont… Freud believed the patient’s free associations, resistances, dreams, and transferences – and the therapist’s interpretations of them – released previously repressed feelings, allowing the patient to gain self-insight classical psychoanalytic treatment aims to help clients gain insight into their problems by recognizing unconscious thoughts and emotions and then discover, or work through, the many ways in which those unconscious elements affect their everyday life

70 Therapy- Psychoanalysis
Interpretation the analyst’s noting supposed dream meanings, resistances, and other significant behaviors in order to promote insight Transference the patient’s transfer to the analyst of emotions linked with other relationships e.g. love or hatred for a parent Resistance blocking from consciousness of anxiety-laden material

71 Therapy- Psychoanalysis
Psychoanalysis cont… the use of psychoanalysis has rapidly decreased in recent years

72 ESSENTIAL QUESTION: What techniques do behavioral psychologists use to treat psychological disorders? GPS STANDARD: SSPVB3- The student will identify abnormal behavior and treatment. e.) compare the biomedical, psychoanalytical, cognitive, and behavioral approaches to the treatment of psychological disorders.

73 Behavior Therapy Behavior Therapy
therapy that applies learning principles to the elimination of unwanted behaviors behavior therapists help clients view their psychological problems as learned behaviors these learned behaviors can be changed without understanding the hidden meanings or underlying processes

74 Behavior Therapy Behavior Therapy
for instance, panic attacks can be reduced without looking for the meaning of the underlying behavior Behavior therapy would discover the underlying learning principles that caused the fear and then would teach the person new learned responses in fearful situations

75 Behavior Therapy Counterconditioning
procedure that conditions new responses to stimuli that trigger unwanted behaviors based on classical conditioning includes exposure therapy, systematic desensitization, and aversive conditioning

76 Behavior Therapy Exposure Therapy
treat anxieties by exposing people (in imagination or reality) to the things they fear and avoid

77 Behavior Therapy Systematic Desensitization
type of counterconditioning it is a method in which the client visualizes a series of anxiety-provoking stimuli while maintaining a state of relaxation it associates a pleasant, relaxed state with the stimuli that once caused the anxiety commonly used to treat phobias

78 Behavior Therapy Aversive Conditioning
many unwanted behaviors are so habitual and temporarily rewarding that they must be made less attractive if the client is to have any chance of learning alternatives type of counterconditioning that associates an unpleasant state with an unwanted behavior Nausea producing drug Antabuse ---> makes you sick when you drink alcohol

79 Behavior Therapy Systematic Desensitization

80 Behavior Therapy Aversion therapy for alcoholics

81 Behavior Therapy Punishment
sometimes the only way to eliminate a dangerous or disruptive behavior is to punish it with an unpleasant but harmless stimulus, such as shouting “No!” or a mild electric shock punishment presents the unpleasant stimulus after the undesirable response occurs

82 Behavior Therapy Token Economy
an operant conditioning procedure that rewards desired behavior patient exchanges a token of some sort, earned for exhibiting the desired behavior, for various privileges or treats

83 ESSENTIAL QUESTION: What techniques do cognitive psychologists use to treat psychological disorders? GPS STANDARD: SSPVB3- The student will identify abnormal behavior and treatment. e.) compare the biomedical, psychoanalytical, cognitive, and behavioral approaches to the treatment of psychological disorders.

84 Cognitive Therapy Cognitive Therapy
it assumes that our thinking affects our feelings somewhere between the event and our response to it lies the human mind which interprets the event and creates an emotional response if we can control our reaction to the event we can also control our response cognitive teaches people new, more adaptive ways of thinking and acting

85 Cognitive Therapy Cognitive Therapy & Depression
self-blaming and over-generalized explanations of “bad” events are often part of the vicious cycle of depression the person experiencing depression interprets a suggestion such as criticism disagreement as dislike friendliness as pity dwelling on negative thoughts sustains a bad mood

86 Cognitive Therapy Cognitive Therapy & Depression
if depressed thinking patterns can be learned then they can also be replaced cognitive therapists teach people new, more constructive ways of thinking If people are miserable they can be helped to change their minds

87 Cognitive Therapy The Cognitive Revolution

88 Cognitive Therapy A cognitive perspective on psychological disorders

89 Cognitive Therapy Cognitive therapy for depression

90 Cognitive Therapy Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy
a popular integrated therapy that combines cognitive therapy (changing self-defeating thinking) with behavior therapy (changing behavior)

91 Group and Family Therapies
Family Therapy treats the family as a system views an individual’s unwanted behaviors as influenced by or directed at other family members attempts to guide family members toward positive relationships and improved communication

92 Evaluating Psychotherapies
To whom do people turn for help for psychological difficulties?

93 Evaluating Psychotherapies
Regression toward the mean tendency for extremes of unusual scores to fall back (regress) toward their average Meta-analysis procedure for statistically combining the results of many different research studies

94 Evaluating Psychotherapies
Poor outcome Good outcome Average untreated person psychotherapy client Number of persons 80% of untreated people have poorer outcomes than average treated person

95 Evaluating Psychotherapies


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