Group cognitive behavioral therapy was used to help patients with schizophrenia improve their reality testing of delusional beliefs. The study involved 6 patients who met weekly for 13 sessions. Sessions taught patients to distinguish between facts and beliefs and apply the ABC model to evaluate activating events, beliefs, and consequences of beliefs. Patients were encouraged to generate alternative explanations for their experiences and empirically test their beliefs. Results showed patients improved in their ability to evaluate beliefs realistically. The group format allowed patients to discuss beliefs with peers and see irrationalities in others' beliefs to help recognize irrational aspects of their own beliefs.
Group cognitive behavioral therapy was used to help patients with schizophrenia improve their reality testing of delusional beliefs. The study involved 6 patients who met weekly for 13 sessions. Sessions taught patients to distinguish between facts and beliefs and apply the ABC model to evaluate activating events, beliefs, and consequences of beliefs. Patients were encouraged to generate alternative explanations for their experiences and empirically test their beliefs. Results showed patients improved in their ability to evaluate beliefs realistically. The group format allowed patients to discuss beliefs with peers and see irrationalities in others' beliefs to help recognize irrational aspects of their own beliefs.
Group cognitive behavioral therapy was used to help patients with schizophrenia improve their reality testing of delusional beliefs. The study involved 6 patients who met weekly for 13 sessions. Sessions taught patients to distinguish between facts and beliefs and apply the ABC model to evaluate activating events, beliefs, and consequences of beliefs. Patients were encouraged to generate alternative explanations for their experiences and empirically test their beliefs. Results showed patients improved in their ability to evaluate beliefs realistically. The group format allowed patients to discuss beliefs with peers and see irrationalities in others' beliefs to help recognize irrational aspects of their own beliefs.
Group cognitive behavioral therapy was used to help patients with schizophrenia improve their reality testing of delusional beliefs. The study involved 6 patients who met weekly for 13 sessions. Sessions taught patients to distinguish between facts and beliefs and apply the ABC model to evaluate activating events, beliefs, and consequences of beliefs. Patients were encouraged to generate alternative explanations for their experiences and empirically test their beliefs. Results showed patients improved in their ability to evaluate beliefs realistically. The group format allowed patients to discuss beliefs with peers and see irrationalities in others' beliefs to help recognize irrational aspects of their own beliefs.
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Group Cognitive Behavioral Therapy
for Delusions: Helping Patients
Improve Reality Testing
Dr. Yulia Landa, Weill Medical College
of Cornell University Presentation by Nick Mayer Outline for Presentation • Introduction to Delusions • Introduction to Cognitive Behavior Therapy (CBT) • Why Group CBT? • Current Study – Overview – Procedure – Results • Conclusions • Schizophrenia affects 1% of the population worldwide • Delusions and hallucinations occur in 74% of patients with schizophrenia, causing significant morbidity • Despite advances in antipsychotic medication, such treatment leads to incomplete improvement • After 2 years of treatment with medication more than 55% of patients still experience delusions Delusions: Traditional Approaches • “False beliefs held with unusual conviction, which were not amendable to logic” (Jaspers, 1963) • Involves perceptual aberration and the failure of normal belief evaluation • Delusional conviction, preoccupation and distress fluctuate over time Delusions: Cognitive Theories • Normal experiences of atypical perceptual experiences • Failure of self-monitoring – Results in an experience in which one’s actions are not the result of one’s intentions • “Theory of Mind Deficit” – Delusions of reference and persecution arise from an inability to represent the beliefs, thoughts and intentions of other people Characteristics of Delusions • Patients with paranoia tend to make excessive internal attributions for positive events and excessive external attributions for negative events • Reasoning Bias – A tendency for people with delusions to gather less evidence than control subjects – Jumping to conclusions Beck and Chadwick • First attempt to modify patients’ delusional beliefs using cognitive interventions • Belief modification procedure – Patients are encouraged to discuss evidence for and against their beliefs – Direct confrontations were avoided • Identifying triggers • CBT for Schizophrenia is focused on: – Reducing distress caused by psychotic symptoms by modifying delusions and beliefs about hallucinations – Enhancing coping skills for managing symptoms – Reducing emotional disturbances such as depression and anxiety by modifying dysfunctional schemas (assumptions about themselves) – Providing psychoeducation (developing a shared model of the nature of psychotic symptoms) – Reducing stigma and sense of alienation Why Group Approach? • Group interventions effective for: – Coping with psychotic symptoms – Decreasing isolation – Improving relationships with others – Strengthening ego functions • Homogenous groups more effective than heterogeneous groups – Shared symptoms increases learning Current Study • Goal: improve patients’ capacity for reality testing by teaching them specific steps needed to process information – Patients will then be able to apply these skills and re-evaluate their delusional beliefs – Psychoeducation: patients learn information processing strategies, not just new information – Function of the group: not just to provide support, amelioration and education, but also to facilitate internal change Details of the Study • 6 patients diagnosed with schizophrenia • All patients taking atypical antipsychotic medication • Most patients were disturbed by their beliefs, as well as disturbed by the fact that for years they were told that their beliefs were delusional • Goals told to the group: – Discuss beliefs that group members held that the majority of people in the community consider to be delusional – Learn how to reality test these beliefs Pre-Treatment Assessments • In individual sessions, patients were asked to choose one or two delusions they would like to explore in the group – The belief that leads to the most disruption in their life / the one they would rather not believe in Samples of Delusions • Someone who lives in my house is praying for me to die so that he can have my girlfriend • Someone is reading my mind and controlling me by moving my body • People can put thoughts into my mind/read my mind • I am being controlled by Satan because the voice I hear in my head is the voice of Lucifer • There are gangs out to put things in my brain to make me forget things • There are good and bad demons that follow me and have sex with me Treatment Overview • Group met weekly for 13 weeks for one-hour sessions • “Columbo style” questioning: – To create a safe, supportive and engaging environment – Patients can feel secure to share their beliefs • Reality focused, structured approach – Keeps anxiety at a minimum – Free-association discouraged • Session structure: warm-up exercise, review of previous topic, discussion of new topic, homework, review of the session 13-Week Program • Session 1: Introduction: How can we make this group safe and comfortable? – Learn to distinguish between Fact and Belief • Session 2: Sharing goals for the group • Session 3: Learn the ABC model – 1. Activating Event: what triggers a delusional thought? – 2. Belief: what is the difference between Event (Experience) and Belief? – 3. Consequences: What are the outcomes of having a belief? Feelings, actions – both positive and negative 13-Week Program • Sessions 4-5: Applying ABC model to patients’ beliefs • Session 6: Can we change our beliefs? – Generate alternative explanations, look for evidence empirical testing • Sessions 7-9: Evaluating and challenging specific beliefs • Session 10: Reinterpret past events in new light • Session 11: Practice • Session 12-13: Developing an action plan Example of ABC Model • Allows for separation of Activating event (A) from Belief (B) • Morris’ Belief: “A person is praying for me to die because he wants my girlfriend” • Activating event: I see him praying • Consequences: – Feelings (paranoia) and behaviors (pray more) – Positive (I have someone to blame) and negative (I do not enjoy my living) *negative examples motivate patients to change the belief! Exploring the Evidence • Morris’ Belief: “A person is praying for me to die because he wants my girlfriend” Evidence For Evidence Against I saw him praying He could have been praying about something else
There are evil forces God wouldn’t honor such a prayer
that can get you
*coming up with alternative explanations helps the patient
give up his/her belief! Group Exercises • Group members encouraged to look for other explanations for each other’s experiences • Mind reading experiment: – Challenged the belief in telepathy • After all alternative explanations were considered, group members were asked to choose an alternative explanation in place of the previously held belief Addressing Concerns about Relapse • What to do in the case the old belief returned? • Patients were given a card with ABC steps • Patients encouraged to practice the logical steps in evaluating beliefs • Homework! Results Results Conclusions: Benefits of Group CBT • Allows for peer-peer discussion of irrationalities and inconsistencies in each other’s beliefs • By observing others’ irrational beliefs, members may see how their own belief may be irrational, and also how hard it is to see one’s own belief as irrational • Helps to generate ideas about alternative points of view • Provides good learning environment • Reduces isolation • Allows more patients to receive treatment