II. Psychotherapy
Psychotherapy is the treatment of psychological problems through confidential verbal communications with a mental health professional. All psychotherapies offer hope that a problem will improve, present new perspectives on the problem, and encourage an empathic relationship with a therapist. The approach a psychotherapist uses depends on his or her theoretical orientation. Types of approaches include psychodynamic, cognitive, humanistic, and behavioral. Types of Mental Health Professionals • Clinical and counseling psychologists have a doctoral degree as well as specialized training for diagnosing and treating psychological disorders and problems of daily living. • Psychiatrists are physicians. They have a medical degree and specialize in diagnosing and treating psychological disorders. Psychiatrists tend to focus on biomedical therapies, although they sometimes also provide psychotherapy. • Psychiatric social workers and psychiatric nurses also provide psychotherapy, often in institutional settings, such as hospitals and social service organizations. They sometimes practice independently as well. • Counselors who provide psychotherapy services usually work in schools, colleges, and social service organizations. Psychodynamic Approaches All of the many psychodynamic therapies derive from the treatment called psychoanalysis, which Sigmund Freud developed and used in the late 1800s and early 1900s. Psychoanalytic treatment focuses on uncovering unconscious motives, conflicts, and defenses that relate to childhood experiences. Freud believed that people experience anxiety because of conflicts among the id, ego, and superego. To manage these conflicts, people use defense mechanisms, which can often be self-defeating and unsuccessful at fully controlling anxiety. Psychoanalytic Techniques In the traditional form of psychoanalysis, clients meet with a psychoanalyst several times a week for many years. The psychoanalyst sits out of view of the client, who sometimes lies on a couch. Some techniques commonly used in psychoanalysis include free association, dream analysis, and interpretation:
Psychoanalytic Concepts Three important concepts involved in psychoanalysis are transference, resistance, and catharsis:
Current Psychodynamic Therapies Today, the classical form of psychoanalysis is rarely practiced. Psychodynamic therapies, however, are widely used for treating the full range of psychological disorders. Psychodynamic therapies differ in their specific approaches, but they all focus on increasing insight by uncovering unconscious motives, conflicts, and defenses. Interpretation and the concepts of transference and resistance are important features of psychodynamic therapies. Unlike traditional psychoanalysts, psychodynamic therapists usually sit face-to-face with their clients. Sessions typically occur once or twice a week, and treatment usually does not last as long as psychoanalysis. Cognitive Approaches Cognitive therapies aim to identify and change maladaptive thinking patterns that can result in negative emotions and dysfunctional behavior. Psychologist Aaron Beck first developed cognitive therapy to treat depression, although cognitive therapies are now used to treat a wide range of disorders. Beck’s cognitive therapy helps clients test whether their beliefs are realistic. Cognitive therapists such as Beck believe that depression arises from errors in thinking. According to this theory, depressed people tend to do any of the following:
Cognitive Therapy Techniques Cognitive therapists try to change their clients’ ways of thinking. In therapy, clients learn to identify automatic negative thoughts and the assumptions they make about the world. Automatic thoughts are self-defeating judgments that people make about themselves. Clients learn to see these judgments as unrealistic and to consider other interpretations for events they encounter. Rational-Emotive Therapy Rational-emotive therapy is a type of cognitive-behavioral therapy started by the psychologist Albert Ellis. In this therapy, the therapist directly challenges the client’s irrational beliefs. Ellis’s therapy hinges on the idea that people’s feelings are influenced not by negative events but by their catastrophic thoughts and beliefs about these events. Ellis points out that catastrophic thinking is based on irrational assumptions about what one must do or be. His therapy aims to identify catastrophic thinking and change the irrational assumptions that underlie it. Behavioral Approaches Whereas insight therapies focus on addressing the problems that underlie symptoms, behavior therapists focus on addressing symptoms, which they believe are the real problem. Behavior therapies use learning principles to modify maladaptive behaviors. Many therapists combine behavior therapy and cognitive therapy into an approach known as cognitive-behavior therapy. Behavior therapies are based on two assumptions:
Systematic Desensitization Systematic desensitization is a treatment designed by the psychologist Joseph Wolpe. It uses counterconditioning to decrease anxiety symptoms. This therapy works on the assumption that anxiety arises through classical conditioning. That is, a neutral stimulus begins to arouse anxiety when it is paired with an unconditioned stimulus that evokes anxiety. Example: A person might develop a fear of high places after experiencing an avalanche on a mountain trail. The avalanche is the unconditioned stimulus, and any high place becomes the conditioned stimulus, producing anxiety similar to that evoked by the avalanche. Systematic desensitization aims to replace the conditioned stimulus with a response, such as relaxation, that is incompatible with anxiety. If psychotherapists can teach their clients to relax whenever they encounter an anxiety-producing stimulus, the anxiety will gradually decrease. Exposure Therapies Systematic desensitization is a type of exposure therapy. Exposure therapies are commonly used to treat phobias. These therapies recognize the fact that people maintain phobias by avoiding anxiety-producing situations, and they involve eliminating anxiety responses by having clients face a real or imagined version of the feared stimulus. In recent years, therapists have started using virtual reality devices to help clients experience feared stimuli. Flooding is a more extreme type of exposure therapy than systematic desensitization. In flooding, exposure to anxiety-producing stimuli is sudden rather than gradual. For example, the person with the fear of heights would be taken to a mountain trail. No avalanche happens, so the person’s anxiety is extinguished. Systematic desensitization involves a series of steps, which occur over several therapy sessions:
EMDR Eye movement desensitization and reprocessing (EMDR) is a method that some therapists use to treat problems such as post–traumatic stress disorder and panic attacks. This treatment is a type of exposure therapy in which clients move their eyes back and forth while recalling memories that are to be desensitized. Many critics of EMDR claim that the treatment is no different from a standard exposure treatment and that the eye movements do not add to the effectiveness of the procedure. Aversion Therapy In aversion therapy, a stimulus that evokes an unpleasant response is paired with a stimulus that evokes a maladaptive behavior. Example: A therapist might give an alcoholic a nausea- producing drug along with alcoholic drinks. Therapists use aversion therapy to treat problems such as deviant sexual behavior, substance abuse, and overeating. One major limitation of this type of therapy is that people know that the aversive stimulus occurs only during therapy sessions. Aversion therapy is usually used in combination with other treatments. Criticisms of Aversion Therapy Many doctors and psychologists criticize aversion therapy as both inhumane and ineffective. Therapists have sometimes used aversion therapy for controversial ends. For example, in the past, therapists used aversion therapy to “treat” homosexuality. Social Skills Training Social skills training aims to enhance a client’s relationships with other people. Techniques used in social skills training include modeling, behavioral rehearsal, and shaping:
Token Economies A token economy is a behavior modification program based on operant conditioning principles. Token economies are sometimes successfully used in institutional settings, such as schools and psychiatric hospitals. People receive tokens for desirable behaviors, such as getting out of bed, washing, and cooperating. These tokens can be exchanged for rewards, such as candy or TV-watching time. Humanistic Approaches Humanistic therapies are derived from the school of humanistic psychology. Humanistic therapists try to help people accept themselves and free themselves from unnecessary limitations. The influence of humanistic therapies led to the use of the term clients, rather than patients, in referring to people who seek therapy. Humanistic therapists tend to focus on the present situation of clients rather than their past. The best-known humanistic therapy is client-centered therapy. Client-Centered Therapy Client-centered, or person-centered, therapy was developed by the psychologistCarl Rogers. It aims to help clients enhance self-acceptance and personal growth by providing a supportive emotional environment. This type of therapy is nondirective, which means that the therapist does not direct the course and pace of therapy. Client-centered therapists believe that people’s problems come from incongruence, or a disparity between their self- concept and reality. Incongruence arises because people are too dependent on others for approval and acceptance. When people have incongruence, they feel anxious. They subsequently try to maintain their self-concept by denying or distorting reality. In client-centered therapy, people learn to adopt a more realistic self-concept by accepting who they are and thus becoming less reliant on the acceptance of others. To do this, therapists have to be genuine, empathic, and provide unconditional positive regard, which is nonjudgmental acceptance of the client. Client-centered therapists use active listening to show empathy by accurately mirroring, or reflecting, the thoughts and feelings of the client. They help the client to clarify these thoughts and feelings by echoing and restating what the client has said. Integrative Approaches to Therapy Many therapists use an integrative, or eclectic, approach, which means they use the perspectives and techniques of many different schools of psychology rather than adhering rigidly to one school. For example, a therapist might use a psychodynamic approach to understand the unconscious motivations influencing a client’s behavior, a client-centered approach when interacting empathically with the client, and a cognitive-behavioral approach to suggest strategies that may help the client cope with problems. Existential Therapies Existential therapies aim to help clients find meaning in their lives. They address concerns about death, alienation from other people, and freedom. Existential therapists, like humanistic therapists, believe that people are responsible for their own lives. |
Vocabulary to Know
Psychotherapy Psychoanalysis Free Association Transference Resistance Catharsis Counter-Transference Cognitive Therapies Systematic Desensitization Exposure Therapy Flooding EMDR Token Economy Humanistic Therapies Client-Centered Therapy Integrated/Eclectic Approach Existential Therapies Quizlet |
|