Psy CHPT 5
Psy CHPT 5
Psy CHPT 5
The purpose of the relationship is to help the client to solve the psychological
problems being faced by her or him.
The relationship is conducive for building the trust of the client so that problems may be
freely discussed.
Inadequate marital, occupational and social adjustment also requires that major changes
be made in an individuals personal environment.
The special relationship between the client and the therapist is known as
the therapeutic relationship or alliance.
o The therapist conveys by her/his words and behaviours that s/he is not judging the
client and will continue to show the same positive feelings towards the client even
if the client is rude or confides all the wrong things that s/he may have done
or thought about.
Confidential
o The therapeutic alliance also requires that the therapist must keep
strict confidentiality of the experiences, events, feelings or thoughts disclosed by
the client.
o The therapist must not exploit the trust and the confidence of the client in anyway.
Professional
o Finally, it is a professional relationship, and must remain so.
Psychodynamic Therapy
The psychodynamic therapy pioneered by Sigmund Freud is the oldest form
of psychotherapy. His close collaborator Carl Jung modified it to what came to be known as the
The free association method is the main method for understanding the
clients problems.
The client is encouraged to freely associate one thought with another, and
this method is called the method of free association.
The censoring superego and the watchful ego are kept in abeyance as the
client speaks whatever comes to mind in an atmosphere that is relaxed and
trusting.
As the therapist does not interrupt, the free flow of ideas, desires and
conflicts of the unconscious, which had been suppressed by the ego, emerge
into the conscious mind.
Along with this technique, the client is asked to write down her/his dreams
upon waking up.
The images of the dreams are symbols which signify intrapsychic forces.
Dreams use symbols because they are indirect expressions and hence would
not alert the ego.
If the unfulfilled desires are expressed directly, the ever-vigilant ego would
suppress them and that would lead to anxiety.
As the unconscious forces are brought into the conscious realm through free
association and dream interpretation described above, the client starts
identifying the therapist with the authority figures of the past, usually
childhood.
The therapist may be seen as the punitive father, or as the negligent mother.
The client acts out her/his frustrations, anger, fear, and depression that s/he
harboured towards that person in the past, but could not express at that
time.
The therapist becomes a substitute for that person in the present. This stage
is called transference neurosis.
In this the client idolises, or falls in love with the therapist, and
seeks the therapists approval.
Negative transference : Seeing the negative, bleak, sad, lost past in the
therapist
o
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.
Psychodynamic Therapy Duration of Treatment
Psychoanalysis lasts for several years, with one hour session for 45 days per
week. It is an intense treatment. There are three stages in the treatment.
The third phase is the termination phase wherein the relationship with
the analyst is dissolved and the client prepares to leave the therapy.
Behavioural Techniques
The principles of these techniques are to reduce the arousal level of the client, alter behaviour
through classical conditioning or operant conditioning with different contingencies
of reinforcements, as well as to use vicarious learning procedures, if necessary. Negative
reinforcement and aversive conditioning are the two major techniques of behaviour modification.
1. Negative Reinforcement
1. Negative reinforcement refers to following an undesired response with an
outcome that is painful or not liked.
2. For example, the teacher reprimands a child who shouts in class.
2. Aversive conditioning Aversive conditioning refers to repeated association of
undesired response with an aversive consequence.
o For example, an alcoholic is given a mild electric shock and asked to smell the
alcohol.
o With repeated pairings the smell of alcohol is aversive as the pain of the shock is
associated with it and the person will give up alcohol.
2
Token Economy Persons with behavioural problems can be given a token as a reward
every time a wanted behaviour occurs. The tokens are collected and exchanged for a
reward such as an outing for the patient or a treat for the child.
For example, let us consider the case of a girl who sulks and cries when
she is not taken to the cinema when she asks.
The parent is instructed to take her to the cinema if she does not cry and
sulk but not to take her if she does.
Further, the parent is instructed to ignore the girl when she cries and sulks.
The wanted behaviour of politely asking to be taken to the
cinema increases and the unwanted behaviour of crying and sulking
decreases.
Modelling Modelling is the procedure wherein the client learns to behave in a certain
way by observing the behaviour of a role model or the therapist who initially acts as the
role model.
There is a great variety of techniques in behaviour therapy. The skill of the therapist lies in
conducting an accurate behavioural analysis and building a treatment package with the
appropriate techniques.
Cognitive Behaviour Therapy
The most popular therapy presently is the Cognitive Behaviour Therapy (CBT).
The rationale is that the clients distress has its origins in the biological, psychological,
and social realms.
Rogers brought into psychotherapy the concept of self, with freedom and choice as the
core of ones being. The therapy provides a warm relationship in which the client can
reconnect with her/his disintegrated feelings. The therapist shows empathy,
i.e. understanding the clients experience as if it were her/his own, is warm and
has unconditional positive regard, i.e. total acceptance of the client as s/he is.
This unique unconditional warmth ensures that the client feels secure and can trust
the therapist. The client feels secure enough to explore her/his feelings.
The reflection is achieved by rephrasing the statements of the client, i.e. seeking simple
clarifications to enhance the meaning of the clients statements.
In essence, this therapy helps a client to become her/his real self with the therapist
working as a facilitator.
Gestalt Therapy
This therapy was given by Freiderick (Fritz) Perls together with his wife Laura Perls.
The client is taught to recognise the bodily processes and the emotions that are being
blocked out from awareness.
The therapist does this by encouraging the client to act out fantasies about feelings and
conflicts. This therapy can also be used in group settings.
Biomedical Therapy
They are medical doctors who have specialised in the understanding, diagnosis
and treatment of mental disorders.
The medicines prescribed to treat mental disorders can cause side-effects which need to
be understood and monitored.
Even the drugs which normal individuals use to stay awake to study for examinations or
to get a high at a party have dangerous side-effects.
These drugs can cause addiction, and harm the brain and the body. Therefore, it is
dangerous to self medicate with drugs which affect the mind.
You must have seen people with mental problems being given electric shocks in films.
Electro-convulsive Therapy (ECT) is another form of biomedical therapy. Mild electric
shock is given via electrodes to the brain of the patient to induce convulsions.
The shock is given by the psychiatrist only when it is necessary for the improvement of
the patient. ECT is not a routine treatment and is given only when drugs are not effective
in controlling the symptoms of the patient.
Ethics in Psychotherapy
In occupational therapy, the patients are taught skills such as candle making,
paper bag making and weaving to help them to form a work discipline.
Social skills training helps the patients to develop interpersonal skills through
role play, imitation and instruction.