Non-Rationalised Psychology NCERT Notes, Solutions and Extra Q & A (Class 11th & 12th) | |||||||||||||||||||
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11th | 12th |
Chapter 5 Therapeutic Approaches
Nature And Process Of Psychotherapy
Psychotherapy is a voluntary and collaborative process between a client and a therapist, aimed at resolving psychological problems, decreasing distress, and improving adaptation to the environment. It involves the systematic application of psychological principles by trained professionals.
Key characteristics of all psychotherapies include:
- Systematic application of theoretical principles.
- Practice by trained and supervised professionals.
- Focus on the client seeking and receiving help.
- Establishment of a confidential, interpersonal, and dynamic therapeutic relationship.
The goals of psychotherapy often include reinforcing the client's resolve, reducing emotional pressure, fostering positive growth, modifying maladaptive behaviors and thought patterns, increasing self-awareness, improving interpersonal skills, and facilitating decision-making.
Activity 5.1 encourages students to practice empathy by trying to understand the feelings and perspectives of someone who has experienced a negative life event.
Therapeutic Relationship
The therapeutic relationship, or alliance, is a crucial component of all psychotherapies. It is a trusting, confidential, and professional relationship built on:
- Contractual Nature: A partnership between the client and therapist focused on the client's well-being.
- Limited Duration: The relationship continues until the client can manage their problems independently.
- Acceptance and Empathy: The therapist offers unconditional positive regard (total acceptance without judgment) and empathy (understanding the client's experience from their perspective).
- Confidentiality: Maintaining the privacy of client disclosures.
This supportive alliance facilitates emotional unburdening (catharsis) and provides a foundation for therapeutic change.
Activity 5.2 involves gathering information about institutions offering psychotherapy.
Type Of Therapies
Psychotherapies can be broadly classified into three major groups based on their underlying principles and focus:
- Psychodynamic Therapy: Views psychological problems as stemming from intrapsychic conflicts, often rooted in childhood experiences and unfulfilled desires. Treatment involves understanding these conflicts through methods like free association and dream analysis.
- Behavior Therapy: Focuses on faulty learning patterns and maladaptive behaviors, aiming to change them through principles of conditioning and reinforcement. Treatment is typically action-oriented and present-focused.
- Existential Therapy: Addresses problems arising from the human search for meaning, freedom, and self-actualization, emphasizing the client's responsibility and the present moment.
These therapies differ in their conceptualization of causes, treatment methods, the role of the therapist, the desired outcomes (e.g., insight vs. behavioral change), and the duration of treatment.
Box 5.1: Steps in the Formulation of a Client’s Problem outlines the process of understanding a client's issues within a specific therapeutic framework, which guides treatment planning and technique selection.
Psychodynamic Therapy
Pioneered by Sigmund Freud and further developed by neo-Freudians, psychodynamic therapy aims to uncover and resolve intrapsychic conflicts believed to be the root of psychological disorders. It emphasizes the influence of unconscious processes and early childhood experiences.
Methods Of Eliciting The Nature Of Intrapsychic Conflict
Key methods used to access the unconscious include:
- Free Association: The client verbalizes all thoughts, feelings, and memories that come to mind without censorship, providing insights into unconscious material.
- Dream Interpretation: Dreams are viewed as symbolic representations of unfulfilled desires and unconscious conflicts, which the therapist interprets.
Modality Of Treatment
Treatment involves:
- Transference: The client unconsciously redirects feelings and desires from past significant relationships (e.g., parents) onto the therapist. This process, including positive (idealization) and negative (hostility) transference, helps the therapist understand the client's core conflicts.
- Resistance: The client's unconscious opposition to therapy, stemming from the anxiety associated with confronting painful memories. The therapist confronts and works through resistance to facilitate progress.
- Interpretation: The therapist's process of confronting, clarifying, and interpreting the client's unconscious material to foster insight.
- Working Through: Repeatedly confronting, clarifying, and interpreting material to integrate unconscious experiences into conscious awareness.
- Insight: The ultimate goal, involving intellectual and emotional understanding of one's conflicts, leading to symptom relief and psychological health.
Duration Of Treatment
Classical psychoanalysis can be lengthy, spanning several years with frequent sessions. However, modern psychodynamic therapies are often shorter, typically lasting 10-15 sessions.
Activity 5.2 involves learning about institutions offering therapeutic help.
Behaviour Therapy
Behavior therapy focuses on modifying maladaptive behaviors and thought patterns by applying principles of learning. It is action-oriented, present-focused, and emphasizes identifying faulty behaviors and the factors that maintain them.
Method Of Treatment
The process begins with a thorough behavioral analysis to identify dysfunctional behaviors, their antecedents (causes), and maintaining factors. Treatment involves extinguishing unwanted behaviors and replacing them with adaptive ones using various techniques.
Behavioural Techniques
Several techniques are employed:
- Negative Reinforcement and Aversive Conditioning: Reducing anxiety (negative reinforcement) or associating undesired behaviors with unpleasant consequences (aversive conditioning) to eliminate them.
- Positive Reinforcement: Rewarding desired behaviors to increase their frequency, often using token economies where tokens are exchanged for rewards.
- Differential Reinforcement: Simultaneously increasing wanted behaviors (e.g., through positive reinforcement) and decreasing unwanted behaviors (e.g., through ignoring or negative reinforcement).
- Systematic Desensitization: A technique for phobias involving gradual exposure to anxiety-provoking stimuli while maintaining a relaxed state, based on reciprocal inhibition (relaxation countering anxiety).
- Modelling: Learning behaviors by observing and imitating a role model (therapist or other).
Box 5.2: Relaxation Procedures describes techniques like progressive muscular relaxation and meditation to reduce anxiety, which is often an antecedent factor in faulty behaviors.
Activity 5.3 provides a practical exercise in helping a friend relax using breathing techniques.
Cognitive Therapy
Cognitive therapies, such as Albert Ellis's Rational Emotive Therapy (RET) and Aaron Beck's cognitive therapy, propose that psychological distress arises from irrational thoughts and beliefs. They focus on identifying and challenging these cognitive distortions to promote adaptive thinking and emotional well-being.
RET utilizes ABC analysis (Antecedent-Belief-Consequence) to identify irrational beliefs (characterized by "musts" and "shoulds") that mediate between events and emotional/behavioral outcomes. The therapist gently disputes these beliefs through questioning, leading the client to adopt more rational perspectives.
Beck's cognitive therapy suggests that early experiences shape core schemas (beliefs and action patterns). Critical incidents trigger these schemas, leading to negative automatic thoughts and cognitive distortions (e.g., overgeneralization, magnification). The therapist helps clients identify and restructure these dysfunctional thought patterns through gentle questioning.
Cognitive therapies are typically short-term (10-20 sessions), open (therapist shares methods), and problem-focused.
Cognitive Behaviour Therapy (CBT) integrates cognitive and behavioral techniques, addressing biological, psychological, and social factors to treat a wide range of disorders effectively.
Humanistic-existential Therapy
This approach emphasizes the human potential for growth, self-actualization, and finding meaning in life. It posits that psychological distress arises from societal and familial curbs on emotional expression and the pursuit of personal growth.
Existential Therapy
Propounded by Victor Frankl (Logotherapy), this therapy focuses on helping individuals find meaning and responsibility in life, even amidst difficult circumstances. It emphasizes spiritual well-being and the quest for meaning, with the therapist acting as an open facilitator.
Client-centred Therapy
Developed by Carl Rogers, this therapy centers on the client's experience and the concept of self. It provides a warm, empathic, and non-judgmental therapeutic environment with unconditional positive regard, allowing the client to explore their feelings, gain self-awareness, and achieve self-actualization. The therapist reflects the client's feelings to promote integration and personal growth.
Gestalt Therapy
Developed by Fritz and Laura Perls, Gestalt therapy aims to increase self-awareness and self-acceptance by helping clients recognize and integrate blocked emotions and bodily experiences. It often involves role-playing and exploring fantasies.
Biomedical Therapy
Biomedical therapies involve the use of medication, prescribed by psychiatrists, to treat psychological disorders. These can range from antipsychotic drugs for severe conditions like schizophrenia to milder medications for anxiety and depression. It is crucial that such treatments are administered under proper medical supervision due to potential side effects and risks of addiction.
Electro-Convulsive Therapy (ECT) is another biomedical treatment, used cautiously when other methods are ineffective, involving mild electric shocks to induce controlled convulsions.
Factors Contributing To Healing In Psychotherapy
Several factors contribute to the healing process in psychotherapy:
- Therapeutic Techniques: The specific methods used by the therapist (e.g., relaxation, cognitive restructuring).
- Therapeutic Alliance: The strong, trusting relationship between therapist and client, characterized by empathy and acceptance.
- Catharsis: The process of emotional unburdening during initial therapy sessions.
- Non-specific Factors: Client variables (motivation, expectation of improvement) and therapist variables (positive attitude, good mental health) that are present across different therapeutic approaches.
Ethics In Psychotherapy
Professional psychotherapists adhere to ethical standards, including:
- Obtaining informed consent.
- Maintaining client confidentiality.
- Prioritizing the alleviation of personal distress.
- Upholding the integrity of the practitioner-client relationship.
- Respecting human rights and dignity.
- Maintaining professional competence and skills.
Alternative Therapies
Alternative therapies are used alongside or instead of conventional treatments. Yoga and meditation have gained popularity for managing psychological distress. Yoga, incorporating postures (asanas) and breathing techniques (pranayama), and various meditation practices (e.g., Vipasana, Sudarshana Kriya Yoga) have shown benefits in reducing stress, anxiety, depression, and improving overall well-being. These practices require proper training for maximum benefit.
Rehabilitation Of The Mentally Ill
Rehabilitation is essential for individuals with severe mental disorders to improve their quality of life and foster self-sufficiency. It involves occupational therapy (teaching work discipline), social skills training (developing interpersonal abilities), cognitive retraining (improving attention, memory), and vocational training to facilitate productive employment and social integration.