1 / 49

Introduction to Cognitive Behaviour Therapy

Introduction to Cognitive Behaviour Therapy. Carol Vivyan 2007. Epictetus 55 - 135 AD. Men are disturbed, not by things, but by the principles and notions which they form concerning things Roman (Greek-born) slave & Stoic philosopher.

albert
Download Presentation

Introduction to Cognitive Behaviour Therapy

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. Introduction toCognitive Behaviour Therapy Carol Vivyan 2007

  2. Epictetus 55 - 135 AD • Men are disturbed, not by things, but by the principles and notions which they form concerning things • Roman (Greek-born) slave & Stoic philosopher

  3. Cognitive Therapy is a system of psychotherapy that attempts to reduce excessive emotional reactions and self-defeating behaviour, by modifying the faulty or erroneous thinking and maladaptive beliefs that underlie these reactions • Beck et al 1976, 1979, 1993

  4. The approach is: • Collaborative (builds trust) • Active • Based on open-ended questioning • Highly structured and focused

  5. ‘Common Sense’ Model Event Emotion Cognitive Model Meaning we give the event Event Emotion

  6. You’re walking down the High Street, and someone you know walks by without acknowledging you…

  7. 4 interpretations – 4 emotions • I don’t want her to see me, I won’t know what to say – she’ll think I’m stupid & boring • Nobody wants to talk to me, no-one likes me • She’s got a nerve being so snooty! • She’s probably still hung over from that party last night!

  8. Cognitive principle – it is interpretations of events, not events themselves, which are crucial. • Behavioural principle – what we do has a powerful influence on our thoughts and emotions • The continuum principle – mental health problems are best conceptualised as exaggerations of normal processes

  9. ‘Here and now’ principle – it is usually more fruitful to focus on current processes rather than the past • Interacting systems principle – it is helpful to look at problems as interactions between thoughts, emotions, behaviour and physiology and the environment in which the person operates

  10. Padesky’s 5 Aspects Model(1986) ENVIRONMENT THOUGHTS BIOLOGY MOOD / FEELINGS BEHAVIOUR

  11. ENVIRONMENT On Plane Turbulence THOUGHTS We might crash BIOLOGY Heart racing Palpitations Rapid breathing Difficult to breathe – choking sensation MOOD / FEELINGS Anxious 90% BEHAVIOUR Reassurance seeking

  12. Feelings & commonly associated thoughts

  13. Groups • Think of a recent situation or event which resulted in a negative mood shift • Anxiety • Sadness • Anger • Groups: therapist / client / observer • Identify: • thoughts / feelings / behaviours

  14. Identify a recent significant shift in mood (emotion) • What was the situation? • How did you feel? (emotion/physiology) • What was going through your mind at the time? (thoughts) • What did you do? (behaviours) • What were the consequences?

  15. Cognitive Model of Panic Internal / External Trigger Turbulent flight Perceived Threat We might crash I’m going to die Anxiety / Panic 90% Catastrophic Interpretation of Symptoms I’ll suffocate and die Physical / Cognitive Symptoms Heart racing Breathless Difficulty breathing – choking sensation Shaking Sweating Avoidance & Safety Behaviours Reassurance seeking: Ask companion Look at faces of other travellers Ask cabin crew Avoid flying!

  16. Early Experiences Cognitive Model of Depression Core Beliefs & Assumptions Beck (1979) Critical Incident Negative Automatic Thoughts (NATS) Behaviour Feelings

  17. Negative Automatic Thoughts Assumptions Core beliefs

  18. Negative Automatic Thoughts • Stream of thoughts that we can notice if we try to pay attention to them (automatic) • Negatively tinged appraisals or interpretations – meanings we take from what happens around us or within us • Specific thoughts about specific events or situations • Brief, frequent, habitual – often not heard • Plausible and taken as obviously true, especially when emotions are strong

  19. Identifying NATs • Shifts in Affect • Distinguish between thoughts and emotion and behaviour • Check for images

  20. Cognitive Model of Depression • Negative cognitive triad • Biased views of • Oneself • I am bad, useless, unlovable, worthless, a failure • The world in general • Nothing good happens, life is just a series of trials • The future • It will always be like this, nothing I can do will make any difference, what’s the point of anything? • Negative filter • Remembering events • Interpreting current events / situations • Overgeneralising from small negative event to broad negative conclusion

  21. Goals of therapy • Help the client counteract negative cognitive biases, and develop more balanced view of herself, the world, and the future • Restore activity levels – especially those that give sense of pleasure or achievement • Increase active engagement and problem solving

  22. Course of treatment • Identify specific problem list (& prioritise) • Eg. Poor sleep, relationship difficulties etc • Introduce cognitive model – how it might apply to client • Goals (SMART) • Reduce symptoms through behavioural or simple cognitive strategies • Identify and challenge NATs • Relapse prevention

  23. Overview of a typical course of therapy • Referral • Assessment: suitability, therapeutic relationship • Assessment (ongoing): problem analysis, wider picture, measures • Problem list & prioritise • Goals for therapy (SMART) • Formulation (ongoing): Sharing model, maintaining factors, predisposing factors, rationale for treatment

  24. Overview of a typical course of therapy • Assessment, Formulation • Treatment: start with symptom focused intervention • Review: every six sessions, repeat measures • Discharge: repeat measures, relapse prevention • Follow up / booster sessions: • 1,3,6,12 month ?

  25. Typical CBT treatment session • Set collaborative agenda • Review time since last session • Feedback on last session • Review homework • Focus on major topics for the session • Set homework • Potential problems with completing homework • Feedback on session

  26. Therapy Skills • Engagement • Warmth and empathy • Collaboration • Guided discovery – socratic questioning • Feedback and summarising • Agenda setting – structure and focus • Open and closed questioning

  27. Aims of Assessment • Initiate & develop therapeutic relationship • Establish suitability for CBT • Gather specific information re current difficulties • Elicit maintaining factors • Initial formulation • Socialise to CBT model • Establish joint understanding of the presenting problem

  28. Suitability for short term CBT • Ability to identify & describe negative thoughts • Awareness & differentiation of emotion • Compatibility with CBT rationale • Acceptance of personal responsibility for change • Alliance potential • Chronicity of problem • Security operations • Focality • Optimism/pessimism regarding therapy

  29. Homework • Identify a recent significant shift in mood • What was the situation? • How did you feel? • What was going through your mind at the time? • What did you do? • What were the consequences?

  30. Measures • The concept of measures is central to the CBT approach, as it enables both client and practitioner to evaluate the impact of interventions (Grant et al 2004) • They are important in the process of assessment and aid the practitioner to develop a credible formulation for the client, so that appropriate cognitive and behavioural interventions can be used

  31. Why Measures? • Assessment – to provide information • Baseline – subsequent measures will show extent of change • Effectiveness – helps to (objectively) demonstrate effectiveness of therapy, and allow modification of treatment • Feedback • Knowledge - data collection & suggests areas for future research

  32. What measures? • Standardised – developed for particular populations and problems • Eg. Beck Depression Inventory • Beck Anxiety Inventory • Agoraphobic Cognitions Questionnaire • Individualised – allow for more specific information for assessment and formulation. • Eg. Problem definition, Targets of therapy, Diaries, % Belief Ratings, Ratings of specific emotions

  33. Cognitive Interventions • Restructuring thoughts and beliefs • Guided discovery • Thought diaries • Challenging NATs (looking at evidence) • Addressing thinking errors • Responsibility Pie • Cost/Benefit Analysis • Downward Arrow technique

  34. Cognitive Interventions • Education Eg. Written information on thinking errors, disorder specific info • Continuous use of formulation • Imagery techniques • Role play & role reversal • Action Plan • Education in Body systems (symptoms)

  35. Behavioural Interventions • Very powerful method of bringing about change • Key component of CBT intervention • Borrowed and adapted from Behaviour Therapy • Incorporate different methodological approaches

  36. Behavioural Experiments • Similar in BT / CBT, but fundamentally different • In BT, it is the end product, in CBT, a means to an end ie. Cognitive change • In BT – graduated, repeated and prolonged exposure • In CBT - New ideas are put to the test. Means of testing the validity thoughts, perceptions, beliefs.

  37. Examples • Hyperventilation to simulate panic • Activity monitoring and scheduling • Metaphors – South American tribe? • Consider experiment for client with OCD, believes something terrible will happen to family if he doesn’t neutralise his thought by doing rituals for up to an hour

  38. Problem solving • Identify problem to be worked on • Think of as many solutions as possible • Consider each solution – pros & cons • Pick solution that appears best • Small steps • Action & review

  39. Relapse Prevention • What have I learned? • What was most useful? • What can I continue to do? • When will I be at risk of this happening again? • What are the signs? • What could I do to avoid losing control? • What could I do if I did lose control?

  40. Coping with Relapse • How can I make sense of this lapse? • What have I learnt from it? • With hindsight, what would I do differently?

  41. Introduction to CBT • This presentation gives you an introduction to the rationale of CBT • It does not enable you to perform CBT • Using Cognitive Behavioural interventions may be helpful for your clients • CBT - Guided self-help?

  42. Summary • No formulation No CBT • Use CB techniques • Bibliotherapy: e.g. Mind Over Mood • Challenge negative thoughts • Court Case • Evidence • More balanced/alternative thought • Downward arrow • Behavioural experiments / exposure • Activity Diaries • Relaxation?

  43. More information & resources • www.get.gg • Self help • Workbooks • online CBT programmes – printable forms etc • Online • Professional links • CBT organisations • Therapist manuals online • Books

  44. Bibliography • Certificate in Cognitive Behaviour Therapy. • Salford Cognitive Therapy Training Centre. 2006 • An introduction to Cognitive Behaviour Therapy: Skills & Applications. • Westbrook, Kennerley, Kirk, 2007. Sage. • Treatment Plans & Interventions for Depression & Anxiety Disorders. • Leahy. 2000. Guilford. • Cognitive Therapy of Anxiety Disorders. • Wells. 1997. Wiley. • Mind Over Mood. • Greenberger, Padesky. 1995. Guilford.

More Related