Unit-2 Counselling TheraPies
Unit-2 Counselling TheraPies
Unit-2 Counselling TheraPies
A.RISHIKULYA.,M.SC.,M.PHIL.,PGDCA
GOALS OF PSYCHOTHERAPIES
Modifying habits
Relating to one’s social environment in a more creative and self aware manner.
THERAPEUTIC RELATIONSHIP
Relationship between the client and therapist known as Therapeutic relationship or alliance.
The first component is the contractual nature of the relationship in which two willing individuals.
The second component is the limited duration of the therapy.(alliance lasts until the client becomes able to
deal with his/her problems.
It is a trusting and confiding relationship
Empathy is different from sympathy and intellectual understanding of another persons situation.
APPROACHES TO COUNSELLING
1.Psychodynamic
2.Behaviorist
3.Humanistic
4.Gestalt
counseling or psychotherapy usually overlaps some of these techniques.
‘integrative’ therapy,
‘eclectic’ way
PSYCHOANALYTICAL AND PSYCHODYNAMIC
THERAPIES
Psychoanalytical and psychodynamic therapies are based on an individual’s unconscious thoughts and
perceptions that have developed throughout their childhood, and how these affect their current behaviour and
thoughts. It is the view that intrapsychic conflicts.(ie)the conflicts that are present within the psyche of the
person, are the source of psychological problems.
Eg: Childhood experiences greatly affect emotions and behavior as adults.
Used for OCD,Phobias,general exercises
Lifting the defense mechanism
It is a long term therapy(4/5times a week for years)
In Psychoanalysis which was developed by Sigmund Freud and focuses on an individual’s unconscious,
deep-rooted thoughts that often stem from childhood. Through free associations, dreams or fantasies, clients
can learn how to interpret deeply buried memories or experiences that may be causing them distress.
Based on Psychoanalysis, Psychoanalytic Therapy also focuses on how an individual’s unconscious thoughts
are influencing them. However, Psychoanalytic Therapy is usually less intensive than Psychoanalysis.
1.Free
Association(
Three main Treatments: Express
anything)
2.Word
Association(
Response to
stimulus
word
3.Dream
Analysis(inve
stigating the
symbolism in
dreams)
PSYCHODYNAMIC THERAPY
Psychodynamic Therapy evolved from Psychoanalytic Therapy and seeks to discover how unconscious
thoughts affect current behaviour. Psychodynamic Therapy usually focuses on more immediate problems and
attempts to provide a quicker solution.
It enhance the client’s self-awareness and
It foster understanding of the client’s thoughts, feelings, and beliefs in relation to their past experiences,
especially his or her experiences as a child
Eg: Depression or anxiety related disorders.
Calming emotions , Guided Imagery,Dream recall
MODALITY OF TREATMENT
Since the process of transference exposes the unconscious wishes and conflicts , thereby increasing the distress levels, the client
resist transference.
Due to resistance, the client opposes the progress of therapy in order to protect himself/ herself from the recall of painfull
unconscious memories.
Resistance can be Conscious or Uncoscious
Unconscious resistance is assumed to be present when the client becomes silent during the therapy session, recalls trivial details
without recalling the emotional ones, misses appointments and comes late for therapy.
The therapist overcomes the resistance by repeatedly confronting the patient about it and by uncovering emotions such as anxiety,
fear or shame which are causing the resistance
CONFRONTATION AND CLARIFICATION
Behavioural Therapies are based on the way you think (cognitive) and/or the way you behave. These
therapies recognise that it is possible to change, or recondition, our thoughts or behaviour to overcome
specific problems.
The foundation of behaviour therapy is on formulating dysfunctional or faulty behaviours, the factors which
reinforce and maintain these behaviours, and devising methods by which they can be changed.
THREE BASIC APPROACHES
1. Applied Behavior Analysis or radical behaviorism focus on overt behavior , with cognition seen as excess
baggage,- unnecessary to the modification of behavior.(B.F.Skinner –Operant Conditioning)
2.The Neurobehaviors mediational stimulus – response model- learning theories of Clark Hull
exp. ,Mediational model pay attention to what goes on inside the organism: Wolpe’s Systematic desensitization.
As a part of this process, the client uses imagery (another internal event) to visualize scenes that arouses
anxiety.. Internal processes are considered to follow the same laws of learning as do overt behaviours.
3.Behavioural and cognitive perspective is the social-cognitive model(Albert bandura concept)-how the
environment affects the behaviour depends on how the person perceives and interprets these environmental
stimuli, rather than on environmental events themselves.
WHO CAN REAP THE BENEFITS OF BEHAVIORAL
THERAPY
People most commonly look for behavioural therapy to take care of:
1.Depression
2.Anxiety
3.Panic disorders
4.Anger Issues
Additionally , it may help treat circumstances and disorders such as for example:
1.Eating Disorders
2.Post-traumatic stress disorder(PTSD)
3.ADHD
4.bipolar disorder
5.Obsessive Compulsive disorder
6.phobias,(including interpersonal phobias)
7.Self Harm
8.Substance Abuse
METHOD OF TREATMENT
The client with psychological distress or with physical symptoms, which cannot be attributed to physical
disease, is interviewed with a view to analyse her/his behaviour patterns.
Behavioural analysis is conducted to find malfunctioning behaviours, the antecedents of faulty learning, and
the factors that maintain or continue faulty learning.
Malfunctioning behaviours are those behaviours which cause distress to the client.
Antecedent factors are those causes which predispose the person to indulge in that behaviour
Maintaining factors are those factors which lead to the persistence of the faulty behaviour
The aim of the treatment is to extinguish or eliminate the faulty behaviours and substitute them with adaptive
behaviour patterns.
The therapist does this through establishing antecedent operations and consequent operations.
Antecedent operations control behaviour by changing something that precedes such a behaviour.
The change can be done by increasing or decreasing the reinforcing value of a particular consequence. This
is called establishing operation.
TECHNIQUES OF COGNITIVE BEHAVIOUR THERAPY
Behavioural Therapy focuses on an individual’s learnt, or conditioned , behaviour and how this can be
changed. The approach assumes that if a behaviour can be learnt, then it can be unlearnt (or reconditioned)
so is useful for dealing with issues such as phobias or addictions
Classical conditioning
Operant conditioning
BEHAVIOR THERAPY BASED ON CLASSICAL
CONDITIONING
Flooding
Systematic Desensitization
Aversion Therapy
BEHAVIOR THERAPY BASED ON OPERANT
CONDITIONING
Token Economies
Contingency Management
Modeling
Extinction
Assertiveness and Social skills training
COGNITIVE RESTRUCTURING (METHODS)
Evaluating how valid and viable are the client’s thoughts and beliefs
Assessing what client expect, what they tend to predict about their behaviour and others responses to them.
Exploring what might be a range of causes for clients behaviours and others reactions
Training clients to make more effective attributions about these causes and
Altering absolutistic, catastrophic thinking styles.
TWO PRIMARILY COGNITIVE APPROACHES TO
COUNSELLING
Cognitive Therapy deals with thoughts and perceptions, and how these can affect feelings and behaviour. By
reassessing negative thoughts an individual can learn more flexible, positive ways of thinking, which can ultimately affect
their feelings and behaviour towards those thoughts. developed by American psychiatrist Aaron T. Beck.
Cognitive therapies locate the cause of psychological distress in irrational thoughts and beliefs.
AARON BECK’S COGNITIVE THERAPY
His theory of psychological distress characterised by anxiety or depression, states that childhood experiences provided
by the family and society develop core schemas or systems, which include beliefs and action patterns in the individual.
Any negative automatic thoughts are characterised by cognitive distortions.
Cognitive distortions are ways of thinking which are general in nature but which distort the reality in a negative
manner.
These patterns of thought are called dysfunctional cognitive structures.
Decatastrophizing
Reattribution
Redefining
Decentering
Deatastrophizing: or ‘what if” hypothesizing , helps clients think through the outcomes they most fear and to
make plans to cope with them.
Reaattribution: moves clients toward alternative causes for events and reactions
Redefining: The problem seeks to make it more concrete and specific , and to state it in terms of the client’s
behaviour. Eg. “ client who feels nobody cares about me” may lead to redefine the problem to : “I need to
reach out to people and show that I care about them”
Decentering: Technique for treating anxious people who believe they are the constant focus of others’s
attention.
KEY CONCEPTS OF COGNITIVE THERAPY
Cognitive Distortions
Arbitrary inference
Selective abstraction
Overgeneralization
Personalization
It is a collaborative approach
Empiricism
Socratic dialogue