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| a psychological intervention designed to help people resolve emotional, behavioral, and interpersonal problems and improve the quality of their lives |
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| person with no professional training who provides mental health services |
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| psychotherapies, including psychodynamic and humanistic-existential approaches, with the goal of expanding awareness or insight |
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| Psychoanalysis primary approaches (6) |
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Definition
1. Free association 2. Interpretation 3. Dream Analysis 4. Resistance 5. Transference 6. Working Through |
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| technique in which patients express themselves without censorship of any sort |
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| technique in which patients express themselves without censorship of any sort |
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| attempts to avoid confrontation and anxiety associated with uncovering previously repressed thoughts, emotions, and impulses |
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| projecting intense, unrealistic feelings and expectations from the past onto the therapist |
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| to confront and resolve problems, conflicts, and ineffective coping responses in everyday life |
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| dreams express unconscious themes that influence the patient's conscious life |
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| interpretation (psychoanalysis) |
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Definition
| from the patients string of free associations, analysts form hypotheses regarding the origin of the patient's difficulties and share them with him or her as rapport developments |
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| treatment that strengthens social skills and targets interpersonal problems, conflicts, and life transitions |
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| humanistic-existential psychotherapy |
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| therapies that share an emphasis on the development of human potential and the belief that human nature is basically positive |
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| phenomenological approach |
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| perspective in which therapists encounter patients in terms of subjective phenomena (thoughts, feelings) in the present moment |
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| therapy centering on the patient's goals and ways of solving problems |
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| therapy that aims to integrate different and sometimes opposing aspects of personality into a unified sense of self |
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| interventions that recognize the importance of awareness, acceptance, and expression of feelings |
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| therapeutic approach that helps people find meaning in their lives |
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| therapists who focus on specific problem behaviours and on current variables that maintain problematic thoughts, feelings, and behaviours |
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| systematic desensitization |
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Definition
| patients are taught to relax as they are gradually exposed to what they fear in a stepwise manner |
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| therapy that confronts patients with what they dear with the goal of reducing the fear |
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| research procedure for examining the effectiveness of isolated components of a larger treatment |
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| technique in which therapists prevent patients from preforming their typical avoidance behaviours |
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| technique in which the therapist first models a problematic situation and then guides the patient through steps to cope with it unassisted |
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| method in which desirable behaviours are rewarded with tokens that patients can exchange for tangible rewards |
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| treatment that uses punishment to decrease the frequency of undesirable behaviours |
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| cognitive-behavioural therapy |
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Definition
| treatment that attempts to replace maladaptive or irrational cognitions with more adaptive, rational cognitions |
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| eclecticism (eclectic approach) |
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| treatments that integrate techniques and theories from many existing therapy approaches |
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| therapy that treats more than one person at a time |
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| abstinence violation effect |
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Definition
| lapse in sobriety that can lead to continued drinking if people feel ashamed, guilty, or discouraged when they lapse |
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| strategic family intervention |
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Definition
| family therapy approach designed to remove barriers to effective communication |
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Definition
| A program for future Bennettonians! |
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| structural family therapy |
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| treatment in which therapists deeply involve themselves in family activities to change how family members arrange and organize interactions |
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| empirical supported therapies (ESTs) |
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Definition
| treatments for specific disorders supported by high-quality scientific evidence |
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| empirically supported therapies (5) |
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Definition
1. Behavioural therapy for depression 2. Cognitive-behavioural therapy for depression 3. Interpersonal therapy for depression 4. Cognitive-behavioural therapy for bulimia 5. Cognitive-behavioural therapy for panic disorder |
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Definition
| use of medications to treat psychological problems |
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| electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) |
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Definition
| patients receive brief electrical pulses to the brain that produce a seizure to treat serious psychological problems |
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Definition
| brain surgery to treat psychological problems |
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