Chapter 12-Treatment – Flashcards

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Insight Oriented Therapy
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A type of therapy in which the therapist aims to remove distressing symptoms by leading the person to understand the psychological causes of his or her symptoms though deeply felt personal insights.
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Psychoanalysis
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An intensive form of therapy that is directly connected to Freud's theory of personality and based on the idea that psychological difficulties are caused by unconscious conflicts
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Psychodynamic Therapy
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A less intensive form of psychoanalysis
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Id
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A structure existing at birth that houses sexual and agressive drives, physical and psychological needs
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Superego
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A personality structure that is formed during early childhood and houses the sense of right and wrong, based on the internalization of parental and cultural morality
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Ego
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A personality structure that develops in childhood and tried to balance the id, superego, and reality
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Free Association
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A technique used the psychoanalysis and psychodynamic therapy in which the patient says whatever comes to mind, and the train of though reveals to the therapist the patient's issues and ways of handling them.
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Interpretation
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A technique used in psychodynamic therapies in which the therapist deciphers the patient's words and behaviors, assigning unconscious motivations to them
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Resistance
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A reluctance or refusal to cooperate with the therapist, which can range from unconscious forgetting to outright refusal to comply with a therapist's request
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Transference
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The process by which patient may relate to their therapists as they did to some important person in their lives
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Client-Centered Therapy
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A type of insight-oriented therapy that focuses on people's potential for growth and the importance of an empathetic therapist
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Incongruence
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According to client centered therapy, a mismatch between a persons real self and his or her ideal self
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Cognitive Behavior Therapy
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A type of therapy that is designed to help patients both to reduce problematic behaviors and irrational thoughts and to develop new, more adaptive behaviors and beliefs
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Behavior Therapy
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A type of therapy, based on well-researched learning principles, that focuses on modifying observable, measurable behavior
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Exposure
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A therapeutic technique whereby through repeated encounters with a stimulus the person becomes less responsive to that stimulus
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Stimulus Control
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A behavior therapy technique that has the client control how often he or she encounters a stimulus that elicits a conditioned response, with the goal of decreasing or increasing the response
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Systematic Desensitization
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A behavior therapy technique in which people are taught to be relaxed in the presence of a feared object or situation
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Behavior Modification
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Therapeutic techniques that use operant conditioning principles to change behavior
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Self-Monitoring Techniques
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Behavior techniques that help the client identify a problematic behavior as well as its antecedents and consequences
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Token Economy
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A behavior modification program that uses secondary reinforcers (tokens) to change behavior
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Cognitive Therapy
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A type of therapy that is degined to help clients think realistically and rationally in order to reinterpret events that otherwise lead to distressing thoughts, feelings, or behaviors
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Cognitive Distortions
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Systematic biases in the way a person thinks about events and people, including oneself
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Cognitive Restructuring
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The process of helping clients view their situation in a new light, which then allows them to shift their thinking from the focus on automatic, distorted, negative thoughts to more realistic ones
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Psychoeducation
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The process of educating clients about therapy and research finding pertaining to their disorders and problems
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Antipsychotic Medication (Neuroleptics)
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Used to treat schizophrenia. It often reduces positive symptoms but does not cure the disorder. Long-term use can cause side effects such as tardive dyskinesia
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Tardive Dyskinesia
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An irreversible movement disorder in which the person involuntarily smacks his or her lips, displays facial grimaces, and exhibits other symptoms
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Tricyclic Antidepressant
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These affect serotonin levels but take weeks to work and can have severe side effects. These were the only widely used antidepressants for decades.
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Monoamine Oxidase Inhibitor (MAOI)
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The first antidepressants discovered but were never as widely used as TCA's. Can cause fatal changes in blood pressure when combined with certain commonly eaten foods. They are more effective with atypical types of depression than with the more typical major depressive episodes.
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Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitor (SSRI)
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These drugs work on selective serotonin receptors resulting in fewer side effects than other classes of antidepressants.
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Serotonin/Norepinephrine Reuptake Inhibitor (SNRI)
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A newer type of antidepressant that affects both serotonin and norepinephrine neurotransmitter systems
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Benzodiazepine
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A type of anti-anxiety medication that reduces symptoms of panic within 36 hours and does not need to be taken for more than a week to be affective
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Modality
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A form of therapy
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Bibliotherapy
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The use of self-help books and audio and video information for therapeutic purposes
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Interpersonal Therapy
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A type of manual-based treatment that helps clients to understand how aspects of current relationships can affect their mood and behavior
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Outcome Research
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Research that addresses whether, after psycho-therapy, clients feel better, function better, live more independently, or experience fewer symptoms
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Rational Emotive Therapy
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Albert Ellis, a part of Cognitive Therapy. Emphasizes rational, logical thinking, and assumes distressing feelings are caused by faulty or illogical thoughts termed irrational beliefs.
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