Psych+physical dependance with long
use (people think they need to keep
taking or brain becomes adjusted to them
Side effects
May be unable to give consent
As we know more of antidepressants=contributes
to development of biological models of depression
Other drug groups; anti-anxiety (from group
called benzodiazepines+can cause dependance
+side effects)+Lithium (for bipolar depression)
Evaluation of drug therapy
Effective for some disorders
Only treats symptoms+are reductionist;
ignores cognitive emotional etc
Side effects+dependance
Can lead to stigmatism as patient is
labelled as shizophrenic etc
Psychodynamic approach; adult neuroses Eg
depression is rooted in early experiences They
are protected by these conflicts by ego defence
Free association Express anything Each incident
may lead to other thoughts/memories=ego defence
mechanisms may lower-repressed material accessed
Dream analysis Symbolic images reflect
unconscious material Wish fulfillment too
threatening to be acknowledged=distorted
To understand meanings=assumptions; 1content that
can be recalled-manifest content 2latent content-
meaning behind manifest content 3 dream work
Dream work is the process that latent
content gets distorted into manifest content
through symbolism and displacement
Projective tests allow client to impose their
thoughts on some particular stimulus material=ink
blot test(asked what shapes means to them)
Evaluation
These theories accept humans are complicated
Therapy can be long lasting=expensive
Depend on client having insight
Need insight=unsuitable for some
disorders Eg schizophrenia
Ethical issues as a result of bringing up distressing material
Behavioural approach; alter
behaviour using conditioning
Behaviour therapy is based on classical conditioning and
involves systematic desensitisation, flooding+aversion therapy
Flooding; inescapable exposure to feared object/situation until
fear disappears Assumes high levels of fear+anxiety can't be
sustained+will fall If it ends too soon-may have opposite affect
Highly threatening+stressful but quick
Systematic desensitisation, a form of counter
conditioning Therapist attempts to replace fear
response with harmless response Hierarchy of fears
Therapist trains client in deep relaxation techniques (the harmless response),
Visualise least feared situation+relax When relaxed=next situation Eventually-
can cope with most feared (can go back+start again at a certain level)
Aversion therapy aims to associate undesirable behaviour with an unpleasent stimulus Eg in the
past gay men have been shown pictures of naked men while given an electric shock-no evidence
to suggest it worked Now it is used for addicts, smoking is associated with feeling sick
Eval; Assumes behaviour is learned through simple conditioning principles,
there is no attempt to address deeper psych issues, they focus on symptoms
not underlying causes Can be effective when treating phobias Ethical issues
Behaviour modification based on operant conditioning This attempts to
alter voluntary behaviour rather than reflexive behaviour
Token economy used in institutions Eg psychiatric hospitals Tokens given as rewards for good
behaviour They can then be exchanged for sweets cigarettes etc It modify's behaviour+doesn't
targeting symptoms Eg with a schizophrenic but once released effects may reverse
Social learnign theory has a cognitive element When a model is rewarded
for a behaviour the obserever=more likely to imitate Eg a phobic person
can observing a model coping effectively with a phobic situation
Token economy has been affective way of improving anti-social behaviour+works in a structured
institution but not for the outside world Unethical to treat patients as stimulus-response machines
Social learning involves cognitive processes Both ignore biological/genetic aspects
Cognitive approach/cognitive behavioural
therapy; to challenge irrational thought processes
Beck's cognitive therapy 1976; to challenge irrational cognitions+replace them with a
more realistic appraisals by identifying -ive thoughts (with a diary)+challenging
dysfunctional cognitions (drawing attention to +ive incidents) This is reality testing
Also using behavioural techniques to encourage +ive behaviour Eg set
list of small goals to develop sense of personal effectiveness Another
aspect may be training in problem solving skill or elaxation techniques
Ellis's rational-emotive behavioural therapy (REBT) People maintain -ive+self-defeating beliefs by
telling themselves how inadequate they are +looking for confirming evidence=tharapist helps
identify situations+ -ive reactions to them; rationalise it for a realistic view This may occur in intense
debates Both Beck+Ellis's approach involves helping client to deal with depressive realisms as well
Eval; CBT is structured but acknowledges complex cognitive processes Important that therapist
acknowledges that depression can be based on accurate perceptions of reality Effective for
depression Less effective for other disorders though it may be beneficial for them Ignores biological
factors Schemata lacks detail Less time consuming+cost effective Avoids stressful indepth probing
Effectiveness of therapies
The most important feature
is whether they work or not
To compare therapies in 1 study=reliable However, large numbers required (all
diagnosed with same disorder at same level of severity) careful assessment
needed of patients before+after, length of study decided, should be a placebo
/control group(effective therapy should show improvement above this group)
Elkin et al 1989
Davidson et al 2004
Meth issues P's should have the same age gender severity of disorder etc
Length of study should be sufficient for treatment There should be a
non-treated group Measures of improvement should be consistent+thorough
Eth issues; consent, avoid psych harm debriefing etc Non-treated groups are denied help No
therapy seems to be the best but there can be a treatment that is most appropriate if we
consider accessibility+speed of action (drugs) duration of action+ethical issues (side effects)