Psychodynamic Psychotherapy Flashcards

1
Q

What aspects of the problem with Sinead O’Connor would a therapist explore in therapy?

A

how some of the things happening in the present with her relationships might be mirroring her past relationships

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2
Q

Since psychodynamic therapy was the first historically, other therapies were…

A

reactions against it

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3
Q

Psychoanalytic and Neo-freudian therapy are among other

A

overlapping terms that mean psychodynamic therapy

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4
Q

What is the primary goal of psychodynamic therapy?

A

To make the unconscious the conscious, and give insight into thoughts, feelings, and other mental activities outside of awareness

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5
Q

What was the fundamental idea of Sigmund Freud?

A

the very presence of the unconscious

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6
Q

What is free association?

A

a client saying what ever comes to mind without any self-censorship or editing, which is not easy. this allows the unconscious to be expressed

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7
Q

What are freudian slips?

A

verbal or behavioural mistakes that reveal unconscious wishes. ex: throw a ring at bf when he proposed

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8
Q

What are dreams?

A

manifested content represents hidden content, which contains unconscious wishes

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9
Q

What is resistance?

A

when client resists certain topics in therapy because they touch on certain unconscious feelings or thoughts

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10
Q

How might one notice resistance?

A

missed appointments, tardiness, change subject

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11
Q

What is a defence mechanism?

A

unconscious techniques created by the emo as an attempt to handle conflict between the id and superego

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12
Q

T or F? Repression, Projection, Reaction Formation, Displacement, and Sublimation are all defence mechanisms?

A

TRUE!!!!!!

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13
Q

What is repression and give an example

A

Repression – keep impulse in unconscious

• Ex: A strong wanting to do something but you feel it’s unacceptable so you push it down. Can only do it for so long because it’s hard to do.

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14
Q

What is projection and give an example

A

Projection – attribute to others

• Ex: a friend that keeps accusing you of a certain thing like jealousy; then turn it back on them. They are most likely feeling that.

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15
Q

What is reaction formation and give an example

A

Reaction formation – do opposite of impulse

• Ex: dislike someone in your family. Since you don’t want to cause a wave you are overly kind and polite to the person.

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16
Q

What is displacement and give an example

A

Displacement – redirect impulse

  • ‘kick the dog’
  • Ex: angry with boss but you take anger out on someone else
17
Q

What is sublimation and give an example

A

Sublimation – redirect impulse in a way that benefits others

  • Ex: if you have a lot of anger you might take up hockey or wrestling
  • Taking something unacceptable and turning it in to something that is socially acceptable
18
Q

What is transference?

A

Client forms a relationship with therapist in which client unconsciously and unrealistically expects therapist to behave like important people from the client’s past

Clients would prejudge and project someone onto you.

19
Q

By becoming neutral and a blank canvas, clients are able to recognize how…

A

their own transference tendencies and the ways in which their unrealistic perceptions of others affect their relationship and their lives.

20
Q

Why does the blank screen role of the therapist facilitate transference?

A

transference because if a therapist reveals as little about themselves as possible you can conclude that feelings the client has towards her are purely transference

21
Q

What is countertransference ?

A

transference but from the therapist to the client

22
Q

What is the key issue with Oral stage (0-1.5years)? What is the difference between overindulgence and under indulgence?

A

dependency/trust/insecure attachment

♣ Underindulgence -> distrustful and pessimistic of other
♣ Overindulgence -> naïve and overly trusting

23
Q

What is the key issue with anal stage (1.5-3years)? What is the difference between overly-demanding parents and overly-lenient parents?

A

the key issue is control:

♣ Overly-demanding parents -> “control freaks,” obsessiveness
♣ Overly-lenient parents -> lax about organization, “slobs,” disorganization

24
Q

What is the key issue with phallic stage (3-6years)? What is the difference between overly positive parents and overly negative parents?

A

self worth/view of self since children seek to have close relationships with their parents

♣ If parents respond too negatively, child’s sense of self is damaged -> insecure, self-doubting
♣ Kind of like playing out pretend roles as a kid – pretend romantic relationship

25
Q

What is ego psychotherapy?

A

Emphasizes social relationships over psychosexual stages: emphasized the adaptive tendencies of the ego over the pleasure-based drive of the id

26
Q

What does object relations therapy emphasize?

A

deemphasized internal conflict (id vs. superego) and instead emphasized relationships between internalized “objects” (important people in their life)

27
Q

What does self psychology therapy emphasize?

A

Emphasizes parental roles in the development of the self, with special attention to narcissism

28
Q

More recent forms of psychotherapy emphasize

A

efficiency

29
Q

What are some features of brief psychodynamic psychotherapies? (5)

A

Narrow problems, quick alliance, focus on present as well as past, therapists are more active, pathology is less severe

30
Q

What is IPT (Interpersonal Therapy)?

A

Designed to treat depression in 14-18 sessions

Improving interpersonal relationships will alleviate depression

Emphasis on role expectations
♣ Ex: Garon felt like client didn’t like her out of fear of Garon not liking her

31
Q

What is Interpersonal and Social Rhythm Therapy?

A

Variation of IPT for clients with bipolar disorder

Control and stabilize daily rhythms, sleep cycles, social interactions

Because predictability is very soothing

32
Q

What is Time-Limited Psychotherapy?

A

Focus on transference and a therapy relationship that doesn’t follow the same unhealthy, unconscious “script” as previous relationships

Make client aware of script to enable a corrective emotional experience

33
Q

It is very difficult to…

A

empirically measure the outcomes of psychotherapy

34
Q

What are some reasons it is so difficult?

A

o Improvement can’t be objectively measured
o Difficult to manualize (have consistent strategy – hard to do because it’s an approach rather than a set of rules), which inhibits empirical study

35
Q

Allegiance effects may influence outcome studies, particularly for psychodynamic therapy… why? (2)

A

o Few empirical outcome researchers are psychodynamic
o Researchers own orientations may bias the results of their studies (like if they are CBT or behavioral therapists – they may really disregard psychodynamic)

36
Q

What are 2 supported components of psychodynamic therapy ?

A

o Interpretation of transference reactions

o Interpretation of countertransference reactions

37
Q

Regardless,

A

large-scale reviews support its benefits with some disorders, but remains unproven with others