Cognitive Behaviour Therapy
Cognitive Behaviour Therapy
Cognitive Behaviour Therapy
Therapy
Introduction
• Cognitive behaviour therapy (CBT) was developed by Aaron T. Beck
• The university of Pennsylvania in 1960s
• CBT seeks to improve clients’ emotional distress by helping them
• To identify
• Examine
• Modify the distorted and maladaptive thinking
• Initially focused on depression
• Now applied to number of disorders
Aaron Beck (early 1960s) developed ‘cognitive therapy”:
• structured,
• short-term,
• present oriented
What is
dysfunctional thinking and behavior.
CBT?
• rational emotional behavior therapy (Ellis, 1962),
• dialectical behavior therapy (Linehan, 1993),
• problem-solving therapy (D’Zurilla & Nezu, 2006),
• acceptance and commitment therapy (Hayes, Follette, & Linehan, 2004)
• exposure therapy (Foa & Rothbaum, 1998),
• cognitive processing therapy (Resick & Schnicke, 1993),
• cognitive behavioral analysis system of psychotherapy (McCullough, 1999),
• behavioral activation (Lewinsohn, Sullivan, & Grosscup, 1980; Martell, Addis, &
Jacobson, 2001),
• cognitive behavior modification (Meichenbaum, 1977)
• Cognitive Behavioural Therapy is a type of talking
therapy which involves identifying and challenging
unhelpful thoughts and helping people learn how
Theory to modify their thinking patterns and behaviours,
to improve the way they feel.
underlying • CBT explores the relationship between feelings,
thoughts, and behaviours. As such, it arose from
CBT? two very distinct schools of psychology:
behaviourism and cognitive therapy. Its roots can
be traced to these two models and their
subsequent merging.
CT Theory
• It is not events per se which determine our feelings
but the meanings that we attach to these events
• Guide behaviour
Underlying • set standards • Acceptance
assumptions/rules • provide rules to follow (if then, • Competency
must, should) • Control
• Over generalized and
unconditional behaviour • About self
Core belief • About others
• Deepest
• Childhood experiences • About future
• Thoughts, feelings, behaviour, physiology and
environment are interconnected
• Open-mindedness
• Both therapist and client speaks from collected data rather than from personal
opinion and prejudice
Characteristics of
Cognitive-Behavioral
Therapies:
Homework is a central feature of CBT. This can include such activities as:
Therapy sessions are really
‘training sessions’, between
Reading Self-help exercises Experiential activities Thought Stopping Intentional Reframing
which the client tries out and
uses what they have learned.
ABC MODEL OF CBT
• The ABC Model is one of the most famous cognitive behavioural therapy techniques for analysing
your thoughts, behaviour and emotions.
B. Beliefs about A:
• C. Consequence:
• Emotions: hurt, depressed.
• Behaviours: avoiding people generally.
STRUCTURE OF TREATMENT SESSIONS
Initial interview
2) Questioning NATs
• Client optimism
Developing A Case Conceptualization
Early childhood experiences
Critical incidents
Activation of NATS
Behaviour Emotions
Reduced
Crying Avoidance sadness rejection Anger
social life
Detecting NATS
• Cardinal question of cognitive therapy
• What was just going through my mind?
• Making suggestions
• Thought diary
A B C
Antecedents or Situations Appraisals and Beliefs Emotional and
Behavioural
Consequences
At home alone, reflecting on the I don’t deserve this, why did he Depressed and tearful
end of the relationship leave me? I cant be happy without
her
• In vivo exposure
• Role play
Examining and responding to NATS
• Answering back
• You told Nobody loves love but u also told husband asks your opinion and
gives u money for shopping, is it..?
• Observational data
• Conjectural data-intuition
• Constructing alternative explanations
• list alternative interpretations of a situation and then establishing the
realistic probability of each interpretation
• Reattribution
• Internal factors Self blame
• External factors
• Behavioural experiments
• Socratic questioning (guided discovery)
• Activity scheduling
• Experiments
Interventions Using CBT Model
• Behavioral Strategies:
• Activity Scheduling:
• Plan each day in advance on hour-to-hour basis.
•Reduces an apparently overwhelming mass of tasks to a manageable list.
•Increases patients' sense of control over their lives.
•Aids normal functioning
•Distraction Technique:
• Counting Thoughts:
Behaviora •
•
Questioning The Evidence
Examining the alternatives
l •
•
Reframing
Thought Stopping
Strategies STRESS REDUCTION
• Relaxation Training
• Desensitization
CASE VIGNETTE
• A 22 Year Old College Student born out of non consanguineous
parents, presented with a 3 year history of gradual onset, progressive
impairment of co-ordination. He reported an incident of his friends
making fun of him after a fall in college. After this he started feeling
embarrassed to go to public places because he thought people will
make fun of him and his condition.
• ABC Model:
• Antecedents : Friend’s Made Fun of him.
• Behavior: Stopped going out much and Others are watching me/ are critical.
• Consequence: Social Anxiety and Isolation.
Interventions
Reassurance.
Encouragement.
Techniques • Encouragement too has a major role in general medicine and rehabilitation.
Encouragement is powerful because people want to believe that their
efforts will lead to something. The other meaning is “to give hope.”
Anticipatory Guidance.
• Rehearsal, or anticipatory guidance, is a technique as useful in
supportive psychotherapy as in cognitive-behavioural therapy.
The objective is to consider in advance what obstacles there
might be to a proposed course of action, and then to prepare
strategies for dealing with them.
• The patient’s sense of control may be enhanced, and thus anxiety minimized, by
naming problems. Naming the problem is also meeting the familiar medical
responsibility of explaining the diagnosis, prognosis, and proposed treatment
• Expanding the patient ‘s awareness.
Cognitive disorganization
A tendency to somatize
Inability to contain or or impairment (short
or an inability to speak of
tolerate affect, term memory should be
emotions (alexithymia)
intact),
Previously or usually strong coping skills
An acute crisis requiring temporary intervention
A sense of internal conflict
• (In crisis, but effectively utilizing social supports, not in crisis and able to afford and benefit, Primary problem
of antisocial therapy, Primary problem social or family related).
• Unable to benefit.
• (Not requiring therapy of any modality, dangerously hostile to treatment or therapist, Significant cognitive or
memory impairment. Severe mental retardation, Malingering Factious illness, failed to benefit or worsened
in previous SPT
• Managing the transference, talking and listening , generating and conveying empathy, Reassuring, Observing,
Expressing interest and concern , Echoing, Tracking, Commenting, Restating, Eliciting current life
reports ,Encouraging ventilation and expression of affect
• Clarification (of information available to the patient but which he /she is not aware )
Acceptance and • Educate the family about the diseases process, Reduce overinvolvement with
adjustment to loss and criticism of patient, Distinguish salutary neglect from limit setting
stage
Long term coping and • Develop the family’s advocacy role for the patient, Return the family to
maximized functioning, Enable family to identify warning signs and
stabilized functioning prodromal symptoms of relapse ,Identify dysfunctional family roles, Support
stage family caregiving role and prevent burnout.