1 / 21

Behavioral Neuropsychology: Behavioral Treatment for the Brain-Injured

Behavioral Neuropsychology: Behavioral Treatment for the Brain-Injured . Prepared by: Cicilia Evi GradDiplSc ., M. Psi. Introduction .

chinue
Download Presentation

Behavioral Neuropsychology: Behavioral Treatment for the Brain-Injured

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Behavioral Neuropsychology:Behavioral Treatment for the Brain-Injured Prepared by: CiciliaEviGradDiplSc., M. Psi

  2. Introduction • Objective generate a workable treatment paradigm to handle problems of management and rehabilitation of brain-impaired individuals  treatment planning and outcome evaluation • Behavioral neuropsychology  application of behavior therapy techniques to problems of organically individuals while applying a neuropsychologically based assessment and treatment perspective

  3. Conceptual Models • Diller and Gordon (1981) proposed three conceptual approaches as models of mental life: the chemist (clinical psychologist), the biologist (neurologist) and the behavioral engineer (behavior therapist) • The result was incorporation of conceptual problem selection, task analysis, and treatment perspectives

  4. Contd. • Horton and Wedding (1984) described: • Clinical psychologist  utilizes psychometric tests to study mental life and test profile to delineate strengths and weaknesses in functioning  look at test scores • Neurologist  employs knowledge of neurodevelopmental procedures and responses to altered conditions of performance to describe functioning  look at neuroanatomy

  5. Behavior therapist  views mental life by observing behavior and abstracting its purpose through the application of S-R contingencies to describe the patient’s functioning  look at behavior • These three components should be integrated in complimentary rather than competitive manner (Diller & Gordon, 1981)  because sophisticated understanding of the three perspective is necessary to facilitate appropriate intervention with the patient and presenting problems

  6. Three Professionals • The integration of those three professionals  produce publicly verifiable, objectively stated outcomes and provide behavioral treatment procedures for the application of behavioral neuropsychology in a meaningful way • With careful and thoughtful persistence, therapeutic changes may take place and generalize to new skills, tasks, and settings

  7. Lewinsohn’s Model • Remediation of memory deficits in brain-damaged individuals • Steps: • General Assessment of neuropsychological functioning • Specific Assessment of neuropsychological functioning • Laboratory evaluation of intervention strategy • In vivo application of intervention strategy

  8. Step 1 • Goal  to understand the patient’s neuropsychological functioning in terms of normative data  comparing with other patients of similar type • Standardized neuropsychological test batteries have significant advantages  Halstead-Reitan Neuropsychological Test Battery, Wechsler, MMPI, Luria-Nebraska Neuropsychological Test Battery  provide data on strength and weaknesses to facilitate treatment planning

  9. Step 2 • Goal  understand the patient’s problem in terms of his/her unique individual functioning, the specific parameters of the patient’s problem • Hallmark  behavioral assessment that includes the purpose and personal meaning of patient’s behavior

  10. Step 3 • Goal  test the value of specific intervention for the patient’s problem in a controlled environment  in which various parameters of a treatment method can be either held constant or precisely varied  to make precise statements regarding cause-and-effect relationships

  11. Step 4 • Goal  to translate the successful laboratory intervention into the real world  is it adequate in a real world? • Two concerns: • Attention need to be devoted to generating occasions of reinforcement for engaging in the preferred intervention • The strength of treatment needs to be considered  specific level of success, adjustment to particular circumstances

  12. Contd. • In chronic conditions  need to arrange environmental cues and contingencies in such a manner that the therapeutic intervention is maintained over an extended period of time and over the variety of different situations that the person is likely to encounter • Summary  Lewinsohn’s model provides a valuable paradigm for conceptualizing the steps necessary for clinical intervention with brain-injured patients • Not excluding other neuroscience methods

  13. Application • Neuropsychological data  as the based for behavior change procedures • Generalizations are possible, BUT we have to remember the complexity of human brain, how much information is stored in the mind and how creative humans are with mental capacities  how complex in brain injury cases??

  14. Activities of Daily Living (ADL) • Goal  help a head-injured person regain their capacity to cope with the activities of daily life  including: • Self-care  eating, drinking, grooming, dressing, personal hygiene, going to the toilet • Domestic duties  cooking, washing up, laundry • Travel  using public transport, driving • Time management and scheduling  organising the day, work and leisure activities, appointments, written schedules, set priorities • Financial skills  shopping, budgeting, banking

  15. Physical Rehabilitation • Goal  help patient reclaim as much as physical independence and mobility as possible  redeveloping normal patterns of movement, improving balance and posture, and increasing strength and endurance, also eliminating unwanted movements and postures • Repeated practice in orderly graded stages  methods are varied

  16. Contd. • Involved a mixture of special exercises and appropriate recreational and everyday activities  from bed and ward, hydrotherapy pool, corridors, stairs, gymnasium • Passive movements  entirely carried out by someone else • Active-assistive movements  to help establish the correct pattern of movements and to strengthen one’s muscles • Active movements  without therapist’s assistance and are used to improve motor control and strength • Resistive movements  work against force

  17. Contd. • Exercises  positioning the body, walking, moving some body parts while sitting or standing, rocking • Mouth exercises and touch (tapping on, vibrating), pressure and heat stimulation

  18. Memory Retraining • External aids  electronic devices, diary/memory book (orientation, memory log, calendar, things to do, transportation, feelings log, names, today at work), automatic cuing devices, environmental modifications (post-it, labels) • Internal aids  mnemonic technique (associating pictures, rhyme),

  19. Contd. • Learning specific information: • Break up the task into small suitable chunks • Repetition  use the diary and rehearse • Cues or prompts

  20. Behavior Modification • Aims  to encourage appropriate behaviors by rewarding them and discourage inappropriate behaviors by withholding the rewards when such behaviors occur • Rewards, time out • Not suitable for all head-injured patients with behavioral problems

  21. Other rehabilitation • Speech therapy • Visual and perceptual rehabilitation • Using special workbook or computer exercise drills design to target patient’s specific problems • Including environmental modifications

More Related