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Introduction to Psychotherapy Carolyn R. Fallahi, Ph. D.
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Introduction to Psychotherapy Carolyn R. Fallahi, Ph. D.

Dec 22, 2015

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Page 1: Introduction to Psychotherapy Carolyn R. Fallahi, Ph. D.

Introduction to Psychotherapy

Carolyn R. Fallahi, Ph. D.

Page 2: Introduction to Psychotherapy Carolyn R. Fallahi, Ph. D.

The Psychotherapy Relationship

• What does it involve?– Shared information– Confidentiality– Strict limitations on the place and time of contact– Time-limited

Page 3: Introduction to Psychotherapy Carolyn R. Fallahi, Ph. D.

Does Psychotherapy work?

• Eysenck’s work– 1952 meta-analysis– 24 published studies of “neurotic” patients.– None of the studies included a control group.– 72% of neurotics recovered with non-specialized

care.– Quasi-experimental– Concluded that therapy doesn’t work.– Response to that published work.

Page 4: Introduction to Psychotherapy Carolyn R. Fallahi, Ph. D.

Smith & Glass (1977)

• Meta-analysis• Rigorous design• Looked at outcome literature• Found a positive result• average effect size for all psychotherapies was

.85.

Page 5: Introduction to Psychotherapy Carolyn R. Fallahi, Ph. D.

Lambert & Bergin (1994)

Researchers Patient diag/tx # of studies Effect size

Allen et al (1989) Public speaking 97 .51

Christensen et al (1987)

OCD/exposure tx 5 1.37

Mattick et al (1990) Agoraphobia 51 1.62

Trull et al (1988) Agoraphobia 19 2.10

Dobson (1989) Depression/Cog Tx 10 2.15

Robinson et al (1989)

Depression 29 .84

Gaffan et al (1995) Depression/Cog Tx 11 .93

Giblin et al (1985) Family Therapy 85 .44

Laessle et al (1987) Bulimia 9 1.14

Lyons & Woods (1991)

RET 70 .98

Benton & Schroeder (1990)

Schizophrenia 23 .76

Page 6: Introduction to Psychotherapy Carolyn R. Fallahi, Ph. D.

Empirically Validated Treatments

• Anxiety and Stress:– CBT for panic disorder– CBT for GAD– Exposure treatment for Agoraphobia– Exposure/guided mastery for specific phobia– Exposure and response prevention for OCD– Stress Innoculation training for coping with

stressors

Page 7: Introduction to Psychotherapy Carolyn R. Fallahi, Ph. D.

Empirically Validated Treatments

• Depression– Behavior therapy for depression– Cognitive therapy for depression– Interpersonal therapy for depression

Page 8: Introduction to Psychotherapy Carolyn R. Fallahi, Ph. D.

Empirically Validated Treatments

• Health Problems– Behavior therapy for headaches– CBT for bulimia– Multicomponent CBT for pain associated

with rheumatic disease– Multicomponent CBT with relapse

prevention for smoking cessation

Page 9: Introduction to Psychotherapy Carolyn R. Fallahi, Ph. D.

Empirically Validated Treatments

• Problems of Childhood– Behavior modification for enuresis– Parent training programs for children with

ODD

• Marital Discord– Behavioral marital therapy

Page 10: Introduction to Psychotherapy Carolyn R. Fallahi, Ph. D.

Therapeutic Skills

• What about therapy seems to be important?– 30% of the variance = relationship factors.– Orlinsky, Grawe, & Parks (1994): reviewed 2,300

empirical studies and found that patient participation is the single most important outcome factor.

– They need an encouraging, positive relationship.

Page 11: Introduction to Psychotherapy Carolyn R. Fallahi, Ph. D.

Intervention techniques v. the relationship

• What’s more important?– Therapeutic technique?– The relationship?– The relationship*****

Page 12: Introduction to Psychotherapy Carolyn R. Fallahi, Ph. D.

Therapist Skills

• Positive interaction• Show interest• Make the patient feel comfortable• Offer encouragement and reassurance• Instill hope• Show sensitivity to patient feelings• Offer practical assistance• Empathy, warmth, and genuineness (Rogers)

Page 13: Introduction to Psychotherapy Carolyn R. Fallahi, Ph. D.

Therapist Skills

• Eagan (1998).– genuineness– Warmth– How do we convey this?

Page 14: Introduction to Psychotherapy Carolyn R. Fallahi, Ph. D.

Acquiring necessary skills

• Can you teach positive interpersonal skills?

– Training– Common responses by novice therapists– Specific skills– EBM– Caring– Emotional involvement– How do you show caring?

Page 15: Introduction to Psychotherapy Carolyn R. Fallahi, Ph. D.

Behaviors that make the patient wonder if the therapist cares.

• Overstructuring therapy

• Inappropriate self-disclosures

• Rigid use of transference interpretation

• Inappropriate use of silence

• Criticism

• Hostile tone or confrontational approaches

Page 16: Introduction to Psychotherapy Carolyn R. Fallahi, Ph. D.

Do therapists care about all patients?

• Is it necessary to develop feelings of caring for the patient?

Page 17: Introduction to Psychotherapy Carolyn R. Fallahi, Ph. D.

Coherence, Confidence, goals

• The treatment plan

• Techniques need to make sense

• Confidence on the part of the therapist

• Positive beliefs about therapy

• How do you translate complaints into goals?

Page 18: Introduction to Psychotherapy Carolyn R. Fallahi, Ph. D.

Complaints and goals

• Vague goals versus specific goals. – Operationalizing goals.– Example, patient with ADHD.

Page 19: Introduction to Psychotherapy Carolyn R. Fallahi, Ph. D.

ADHD Goals

• Psychoeducational Goals– Assign books on ADHD: The

patient was referred to specific reading material designed to increase his/her knowledge about ADHD.

– Teach Problem-solving skills: The patient was taught problem-solving skills that involve identifying the problem, brainstorming solutions, evaluating options, implementing action, and evaluat8ing results.

– Teach self-control strategies: The patient was taught the self-control strategy of “stop, listen, think, and act” to assist him/her in curbing impulsive behavior.

• Conduct Psychological Testing

– The patient was administered psychological testing in order to establish the presence of ADHD, a learning disability, and to assist with a description of strengths and weaknesses.

• Refer for Psychiatric Evaluation

– Refer to a psychiatric for possible psychotropic medications.

Page 20: Introduction to Psychotherapy Carolyn R. Fallahi, Ph. D.

Agreements and Contracts

• What does the therapist think? Offered after the first meeting.

• Provision that this plan will be updated.• Initial treatment plan.• Signed? Verbal agreement?

Page 21: Introduction to Psychotherapy Carolyn R. Fallahi, Ph. D.

Comprehensive Treatment Plan

Name:

Date of first visit:

Assets facilitating treatment:

Barriers or challenges potentially interfering with treatment:

Problem List:

Goals, methods, Initial time frame:

Patient informed Consent and participation:

I have discussed this plan with Dr. Fallahi, understand it, and with my full and informed consent agree to the course of action outlined above.

________________________ __________________

Patient Signature Date

Page 22: Introduction to Psychotherapy Carolyn R. Fallahi, Ph. D.

Building and maintaining the therapeutic relationship

• The first contact.• The first telephone call..• Every interaction.

Page 23: Introduction to Psychotherapy Carolyn R. Fallahi, Ph. D.

Building and maintaining the therapeutic relationship

• Active listening.

• Friendly interpersonal exchange.

• Synthesizing the information.

• Focus is on the patient.

• Avoid negative interchange.

• Resist distractions.

• Remember information about the patient.

• Don’t be judgmental.

Page 24: Introduction to Psychotherapy Carolyn R. Fallahi, Ph. D.

What if the patient pushes your buttons?

• Supervision

• Supervision

• Supervision

• Referral?

Page 25: Introduction to Psychotherapy Carolyn R. Fallahi, Ph. D.

Five indications of a good working relationship

• 1) Desire to see the patient.

• 2) Information is shared.

• 3) positive affect is expressed.

• 4) there is a sense of teamwork.

• 5) You can work out negative stuff.