5a) Exposure therapies - Principles and Applications Flashcards

1
Q

Define desensitisation (4)

A
  • Becoming comfortable with the uncomfortable
  • therapeutic procedure used in behavioural therapy - subject is made to confront (exposed to) the feared stimulus or situation.
  • commonly used to treat anxiety and phobic conditions.
  • Mechanism through which Exposure therapy (procedure works)
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2
Q

Identify and describe types of desensitisation/ETs (3;2;1;4)

A
  • In-vitiro (Imaginal)
    o Graduated (Systematic Desensitization)
    o Exposure to most feared situation (Implosion therapy)
    o Exposure to feared images
  • In-vivo = in person
    o Graduated
    o Most-feared situation (Flooding therapy)
  • Interoceptive: exposure to feared sensations
    o Feared bodily sensations e.g., high HR, tight chest
  • Eye-movement desensitization (EMDR; Francine Shapiro)
    o exposure to threatening stimuli with rapid eye-movements
    o initially controversial technique
    o Empirically validated technique for PTSD
    o Need specialised training
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3
Q

Provide rationale for use of desensitisation (3)

A
    • Desensitisation is not something that just occurs in exposure therapy
      o E.g., living near busy road – become desensitised loud noises
    • Response decrement with repeated exposure is a well documented phenomenon.
      o In humans, demonstrable from “head to toe.”
      o Is observed for different sensory receptors, multi-sensory phenomenon.
      o In animal, bird, insects, plants.
    • Exposure is the most validated technique in psychotherapy (100s of studies).
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4
Q

Provide rationale for use of desensitisation (3)

A
    • Desensitisation is not something that just occurs in exposure therapy
      o E.g., living near busy road – become desensitised loud noises
    • Response decrement with repeated exposure is a well documented phenomenon.
      o In humans, demonstrable from “head to toe.”
      o Is observed for different sensory receptors, multi-sensory phenomenon.
      o In animal, bird, insects, plants.
    • Exposure is the most validated technique in psychotherapy (100s of studies).
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5
Q

Identify mechanisms of desensitisation (5)

Which one is the most popular?

A
  • Reciprocal inhibition hypothesis
  • The extinction hypothesis
  • Habituation
  • Neural toughening hypothesis
  • Cognitive hypothesis, learned self efficacy

Habituation most popular

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6
Q

Identify applications of desensitisation. (6; 4; 3; 2)

A
  • Anxiety disorders: specific phobias, social Phobia, OCD, PTSD, panic and agoraphobia
  • When clients wants to escape a fear as it targets avoidance behaviours
  • Subclinical anxiety conditions: Test anxiety, Performance anxiety, Driving anxiety. Anxiety that is secondary to medical procedures.
     chemotherapy induced side-effects in cancer.
     distress induced by medical investigations (CT scans, dental extractions).
     secondary to genuine medical conditions: asthma, emphysema.
  • Non-anxiety conditions: psychogenic vomiting, nightmares, other conditioned emotions (anger control, impulse control)
  • preparation for war / high risk sports
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7
Q

When can’t desensitisation be applied?

A

When a situation is actually unsafe - can’t habituate if the situation is unsafe

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8
Q

Which protocol is most common for exposure therapy and why? (3)

A

Habituation/extinction protocol is the most common
o Most empirical data to support it
o Across severity levels
o Across species

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9
Q

Describe the habituation process. (4)
Draw out graph.

A
  • If our bodies are in an anxious situation, our bodies can’t stay anxious forever = assuming there is nothing to realistically be afraid forever
  • Without avoidance, anxiety plateaus and reduces naturally
  • The more it happens, the lower the peak, the smaller the length of time
  • Need to repetitively get clients to do it – only then can they become comfortable
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10
Q

Identify the 4 stages to exposure therapy.

There are 3 parts to the first stage.

A
  • 1) Preparation phase:
    o Psychoeducation
    o Motivation enhancement
    o Hierarchy construction
  • 2)Conducting Exposure Therapy
  • 3) Consolidation and generalisation phase
  • 4) Termination of Exposure Therapy
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11
Q

What psychoeducation is involved when preparing clients for ET? (4)

A
  • Educate the client on what ET involves
  • explain rationale for exposure - empirically validated, habituation
  • Get a whiteboard out and draw out the habituation diagram
  • Get them to identify a thing that they are no longer afraid of (e.g., driving on the motorway)
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12
Q

What is involved in motivation enhancement when preparing clients for ET? (3)

A
  • Examine client’s attitude to exposure therapy
  • Examine past experiences. Make sense of experience
    o Why did the past experience of ET not work?
    o Is it a client variable? Or a therapist variable?
  • Be persuasive about exposure therapy without making the person feel bullied into compliance
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13
Q

How can you be persuasive about exposure therapy without making the person feel bullied into compliance? (4)

A
  •  Point out differences between programs that do and don’t work
  •  Use information from patient’s experiences
  •  Use principles of attitutde change including cognitive dissonance
  •  Discuss habituation with examples (war, startle response)
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14
Q

Why do we need to examine client’s attitude to exposure therapy?

A
  • If their GOAL is: not TO SUFFER NO ANXIETY DURING EXPOSURE
     This is not the right attitude – client DOES need to have some anxiety for ET to work
     ET does not work if the client does not feel anxious – you can’t habituate if you don’t feel anxious
     Make them understand the concept of graded exposure
     With ET, we ideally don’t want clients to be flooded
     Want to start at lowest SUDs that will provide an anxiety experience within a tolerable level, and then make our way up
  • Most importantly – work with clients
  • Need to have a goal in mind when you figure out the first step
    o Differentiate between scientific vs. lay opinions about exposure therapy
    o Some clients may be daunted vs. be excited
    o Some clients have no experience doing structured exposure vs. some others may
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15
Q

How should we go about contructing a hierarchy for ET? (4)

A
  • Items are graduated from low to high ratings of SUDS.
  • We don’t exposure lists with too many tasks that it looks daunting - Item numbers range from 8-20
  • Ideally break it down into smaller hierarchies
  • Items are concrete, specific, real.
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16
Q

Identify some parameters in which discomfort can be varied? (6)

A
  • time before event
  • distance from event
  • use of multiple sensory modalities
  • use of fearful cognitions or fearful sensations
  • time projection (now vs. in the past)
  • varying measures of control accessible to the subject
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17
Q

Identify 5 considerations when conducting exposure therapies.

A
  • A. Use scientific principles of desensitisation
  • B. Manage compliance & maintain/enhance motivation
  • C. Supervise exposure programs if necessary
  • D. Address common problems in exposure therapy
    o Client resistance (anxiety, anger, distrust)
    o Other problems
  • E. Effective use of exposure tasks as homework
18
Q

What are the scientific principles of desensitisation? (10)

A
  • Prolonged exposure is better than brief exposure
    o More exposure, better the outcome
    o Because there is more opportunity for client’s anxiety to habituate
    o Although the client’s capacity to tolerate exposure is a critical mediating factor
  • If exposure is very brief, repeat it several times, preferably within the same session
  • Regularity: More regular, better outcome
    o daily or several times weeks rather than once a week or month
  • In-vivo exposure is usually better than imaginal exposure (when both modalities are accessible and feasible)
  • Graduated exposure is usually preferred to “Flooding therapies”
    o Esp. when drop out rates are considered
  • Terminate exposure when anxiety is low rather than high (to counter appraisal of failure)
  • Identify and phase out safety behaviours during the exposure program – informed by knowledge of mechanisms involved (e.g., conditioning/cognitive)
  • Combination of in-vivo and imaginal exposure may be required in certain conditions
    o esp in OCD when “covert” events including intrusive thoughts and images are the feared stimuli
  • In certain situations, exposure must be combined with response prevention to produce desired effects (e.g., OCD)
  • Exposure must be tailored to fit the motivational status of clients.
19
Q

What does an assessment of motivation involve? (2)

A
  • Consideration of current motivational status and expectations
  • Ability to maintenance motivation over the course of the exposure program (Ct. should not run out of steam before completion)
20
Q

How can we manage compliance? (4)

A
  • Use monitoring charts
  • Use supportive others if applicable
  • Supervise sessions from time to time
  • Good therapeutic alliance will facilitate more open discussion of problems and therefore ensure better compliance
21
Q

How can we enhance motivation for ET? (5)

A
  • Expressing empathy: acknowledging distress, avoid arguments
  • Use strategies of motivational interviewing
     Developing discrepancies (desired goal & current state).
     Foster hope
  • Support self-efficacy
  • Deal with unhelpful expectations by:
     Anticipating the fears at the top of the hierarchy
     Normalise the fact that clients have good days and bad days – some days may be easier, some days may be harder
     Prepare client’s for good and bad days
  • Use positive feedback
22
Q

How should positive feedback be used in exposure therapy? (4)

A
  • Be generous with positive feedback
  • Organise milestones and celebrations
  • Examine how positive feedback is received - identify patterns of ‘yes-but’ and challenge attributions
  • Use social support - identify supportive vs. unsupportive persons
     Negotiate effective, workable strategies to use supportive persons
23
Q

Provide 3 reasons why we should supervise exposure programs from time to time

A
  • Supervision used as assessment
  • As therapeutic intervention
  • Prevent excessive, abnormal behaviour
24
Q

What should we do once objectives of supervision are achieved?

A
  • Phase out reassurance
  • phase out supervision
25
Q

How can supervision of exposure programs be used as assessment? (3)

A

o When the interview yields inadequate or inconsistent data
 When details are unclear (many don’t know answers)
 To clarify inconsistencies (e.g., subjective vs. objective)
o Identify reasons for lack of progress
o To observe directly rituals, client’s reactions, coping and safety behaviours

26
Q

How can supervision of exposure programs be used as therapeutic interventions? (5)
What can replace supervision for some of these objectives?

A
  • Supervision often reduces distress levels (exception anorexia) and makes compliance with exposure more likely
  • Modeling appropriate behaviours (participant modeling; not passive modeling)
  • Provide support to Ct. when most needs this
  • Motivate patient participation.
  • Enforce exposure (E&RP) to feared stimuli.

Note: Some of these objectives may be attained with supervision by supportive others

27
Q

In what ways can supervisions be used to prevent excessive, abnormal behaviour? (5)

A
  • Monitor and decrease time spent in rituals.
  • Disrupt sequences, mental rituals.
  • Disrupt repetitions.
  • Interrupt patient’s “absorption” in ritual.
  • Prevent counting/checking (verbal, mental, tactile, visual).
28
Q

Identify common problems in ET (4)

A
  • Worsening of symptoms
  • Not progressing at the expected rate
  • Drop outs
  • Therapist as the problem
29
Q

Provide possible reasons for why symptoms can worsen during ET. (5)

A
  • Anticipatory anxiety => worsening of symptoms, loss of morale.
     The higher the anticipatory anxiety, the worse the ET will be
  • Exposure too brief?
  • Exposure not graduated? => sensitization.
  • Condition where intensity of exposure is difficult to control (Eg. social anxiety, OCD, PTSD).
  • Presence of other psychopathology.
     E.g., avoidant personality disorder
30
Q

Provide potential solutions, if worsening of symptoms during ET is observed. (5)

A
  • Cognitive therapy that targets the client’s expectations.
  • Supervised exposure sessions for a while.
  • Relaxation training.
  • Postpone exposure.
  • Introduce intermediate steps in the hierarchy - SUDs levels may be beyond what they can handle
31
Q

Provide possible reasons for why progress may not happening at the expected rate during ET. (7)

A
  • principles of scientific exposure therapy not being followed.
  • anxieties of therapist about using exposure therapy.
     E.g., PTSD – therapist’s fear of retraumatising the client
  • Slow rates of habituation associated with co- morbidity (PD, depression, drugs/alc, etc.)
  • unrealistic “expectations” of client/ therapist.
  • over-reaction to bad days.
  • problems with compliance or understanding of instructions.
  • medication complications.
     Benzodiazepines – impacts habituation because they don’t experience anxiety
32
Q

Provide potential solutions, if ET not progressing at expected rate (4)

A
  • Be realistic, set achievable goals
  • Supervise exposure sessions
  • Monitor exposure sessions
  • Set milestones and celebrations
33
Q

Provide possible reasons for why drop outs occur during ET. (3)

A
  • can’t cope with current intensity of exposure task or duration of program
  • can’t bear to think about future exposure tasks
  • lose faith in program/therapist
34
Q

Provide potential solutions for drop outs (4)

A
  • Allow the client to opt out with “dignity”
  • Maintain an open-door policy so that the client can rejoin when more motivated/can access additional resources
  • Alternative treatments (medication, psychotherapy)
  • combined treatment (medication & CT)
35
Q

Provide possible reasons for why therapist can be the probelm during ET. (3; 2; 2)

A

Therapist anxiety and discomfort
* Common with beginners
* Therapist anxiety can lead to poor relationship and increase client doubts
* Solution: supervision, desensitisation for therapist

Knowledge factors
* Principles of desensitisations are not followed
* inappropriate selection of problem/case to apply to (e.g., severe personality, drug and alcohol problems)

Deficiency in therapist skills to:
* Motivate client
* Address resistance

36
Q

What to consider when assigning ET as learning/discovery task? (3)

A
  • Integral to the procedure regardless of which paradigm is being adopted
  • Set SMART Task (specific, measurable, achievable, relevant and timely)
  • Follow best-practice principles (Details in a separate class) of setting learning/discovery tasks
37
Q

Identify some other issues that might occur during ET. (6)

A
  • use of distraction strategies and safety-cues
    o How effective, reliable and portable is this?
    o Usually good to achieve some control over distress
    o Phase out at a later stage
  • should “escape” from situation be permitted? No?
  • Panic attacks occurs during exposure
  • use of medication
    o Possible interactions between benzodiazepines and exposure therapy - “toughening hypothesis”
    o Can use antidepressant medication, SSRIs
    o When to withdraw medication? before exposure programme or when client is okay?
  • ethical issues
  • possible contra-indications
38
Q

What to do if a panic attack happens during exposure? (10)

A
  • Don’t panic
  • Acknowledge distress
  • Examine attributions and coping
  • De-catastrophize
  • Full vs. partial escape responses
  • Effect of panic on subsequent sessions
     Organise a celebration when client returns for exp.
     Supervised session if necessary
  • Challenge negative attitude affecting therapy.
39
Q

Identify some ethical issues concerning use of ET. (2; 1; 1; 3)

A
  • Is this therapy forced on the client?
    o Does the client feel afraid to refuse this form of therapy on account of the reactions from therapist?
    o Have other options been discussed objectively?
  • Confidentiality
    o Content of exposure therapy, especially if using loop tapes, etc.
  • Special issues concerning supervision of exposure therapy.
  • Duty of care to client
    o not to oneself or one’s profession at the cost of the client
    o has “personal distress” been factored in the cost-benefit analysis
    o are you happy to refer the client on to others, other professionals when appropriate
40
Q

What are some possible contra-indications for ET? (5)

A
  • Psychotic conditions, even when anxiety is a predominant feature.
    o Avoidant PD, schizoid PD
    o Too unpredictable – habituation is quite poor
  • Severe personality disorders, where anxiety is unpredictable, and habituation is very poor.
  • Conditions where control over aggressive impulses might be difficult to predict.
  • Where anxiety is not the predominant problem.
    o E.g., when depression is the main problem
  • Anx conditions where desensitisation might not be indicated.
    o Conditions when there is a skill deficit.
    o When anxiety is general and non-specific? Although currently exposure programs are used to treat GAD
    o Poor motivation to commence or sustain a programme of DS.
41
Q

Summary (5)

A
  • Exposure therapy is no longer on trial. There is overwhelming evidence that exposure therapy works
  • Wide applications. Integral to treatment of anxiety disorders
  • Quick results:
    o Achieving success with exposure programs for most anxiety disorders is fairly easy [Bread and butter stuff]
  • Knowledge of principles are important
  • Therapist skill to tackle client resistance is important