Summary of Chapter 1 of the The Individual Book (de Bruin, E., 1st Edition)

This is the Chapter 1 of the book The Individual (de Bruin, E., 1st Edition). Which is content for the exam of the Theory component of Module 4 (The Individual) of the University of Twente, in the Netherlands.

 

Chapter 1:

Making use if different delivery formats to enhance access and effectiveness

Time:

  • Process/ outcome of therapy own pace
  • Long-term therapy may contribute to dependency/ client being stuck
  • Therapist-defined time boundaries: brings about strong therapeutic frame/ holding environment. Characteristic psychoanalytic/ psychodynamic approaches
  • Frequency/ length sessions:
  • Long sessions --> increase emotional intensity work
  • Hight frequency sessions -->  therapist gets to know rhythms of client’s life
  • Long term therapy:
  • Anxious individuals in any social situation --> initially need long period of time to learn to trust therapist sufficiently --> then develop new/different ways to relate to others
  • Co-morbidity: when client has multiple problems
  • Long term health conditions: benefit from ongoing psychotherapeutic support
  • Brief therapy: (less 20 min) pressures to reduce waiting times --> development effective models for time-limited work.
  • Time limited therapy:
  • Appropriate when clients present problems arising from life events
  • 2 + 1 model: clients offered 2 sessions one week apart --> a follow-up meeting 3 months later --> 60% significant benefits
  • Front-load sessions: 3 sessions 1st week --> 1 session 2nd week --> final session 1 month later
  • Principles time-limited counselling:
  • Initial assessment: assess readiness/ appropriateness of work
  • Active involvement client: homework
  • Specific focus: seek address underlying personality issues
  • Active approach: provides client new perspectives/ experiences
  • Stage structure: stages related to specific aim/ focus
  • End therapy: consolidate gains/ explore possible implications for the loss of therapy
  • Intermittent therapy:
  • Interruption, not termination: therapy will pause when gained enough to proceed with life
  • Intermittent therapy: active approach
  • Advantages:
  • Client positioned as empowered (ability to make important decisions about their treatment)
  • Remember better learned material from sessions and use it day-to-day basis
  • Single-session therapy (walk-in service): 90-120 minutes
  • Preparing client: ensure client suitable high-intensity session/ identify focus session/ ensure safety wellbeing client

Place:

  • Emotional geography: mental health/ well-being/ emotional healing shaped by locations which people live and where they receive help
  • Organisational contexts:
  • Large organisations --> bureaucratic procedures, good quality procedures/ training/ supervision
  • Smaller organisations --> decision  making face-to-face meetings of those involved
  • Management structures: offer voluntary/ confidential relationships
  • Inter-professional work: specialist work alongside colleagues from other professional groups, with their own organisational “territories”
  • Organisations as an open system: analysis organisational cultures/ values
  • Employee assistance programmes:
  • In-house: counsellors employed by organization
  • Out-of-house: external counselling agency under contract to the organization
  • Paid by employer --> suspicion over confidentiality/ pressure on the counsellor to produce results consistent need of the organization

Who can be a therapist?

  • Therapist: represents caring face community as a whole
  • Professional therapist: with differing degrees of professional involvement
  • Private practice: develop own personal therapeutic style
  • Healthcare  organisations: function within tightly defined protocols
  • Non-professional counsellors: same work, without same training/ scale of payment --> experience determines quality results
  • Disadvantages: burnout/ development professional distancing or detachment clients
  • Low-intensity support workers: trained helping, male use evidence-based resources
  • Stepped care models: offer the least intrusive form of intervention
  • Embedded counselling: use counselling skills/ therapeutic principles, but professional role is not explicitly of a psychotherapeutic.
  • Self-help groups: people similar problem, meet together without assistance professional leader à transcends budgetary limitations
  • Professional assistance: help get started, proactive role, determine where to meet and how to proceed
  • Ideology: explicit set of ground rules
  • New self-narrative and sense of identity: previous identity destroyed
  • Peers:
  • Peer counselling model: expression here-and-now awareness of feelings/ bodily states. No “expert” interpretation/ guidance on person in listening/ helping role
  • Advantages:
  • Easy access
  • Absence power imbalance
  • Opportunity acquire helping skills/ experience
  • Therapeutic communities: residential settings, individuals seeking psychotherapeutic help live together period time, receive intensive therapy à away from pressures/ threats everyday life, participants engage process of recovery/ renewal
  • Therapist: is everyone, plus the shared culture created

Who is the client?

  • Individuals:
  • One-to-one therapy: reflects/ maintains individualist stance --> issue --> individualisation of what in reality are social problems
  • Sometimes emotional/ behavioural problem does not exist “in” the individual, but arises pattern interaction between members family/ cultural group
  • Autonomous motivation: extent client chooses to attend therapy themselves
  • Couples:
  • Couple therapy: recognise problems rooted in relationship rather than being attributable to individual issues --> aims achieve shared understanding what they want from each other, and how they want to be together.
  • Families:
  • Family therapy: set unique challenges/ opportunities
  • Groups: exhibit broader range interpersonal behaviour --> aim to identify/ define curative or therapeutic factors in groups
  • Curative factors: grounded perceptions of clients regarding helpful material, which provides valuable pointers to how the group might be run
  • Communities:
  • At community level: identify and make own capacity for support/ healing/ challenging both internal/ external sources of oppression
  • Preventative interventions: strict regulations to prevent, in field mental health, 3 levels of prevention:
  • Primary prevention: reduce future incidence of a problem
  • Secondary prevention: targeting those at risk
  • Tertiary prevention: minimise negative impact of existing disorder/ problem

Technologies:

Any form of practical application of scientific knowledge’

  • Telephone:
  • Telephone counselling: provide more counselling than any other type of counselling
  • Faceless helper: perceived as ideal, imagined as whoever caller wants/ needs
  • Client perception of its value:
  • Control: participants can hang up
  • Convenience: participants can call whenever they want
  • Absence of inhibiting influences: free of cost
  • Internet:
  • Email counselling: asynchronous (time-delayed counselling)/ synchronous (contact in real time).
  • Advantages:
  • Permanent record therapy contact
  • Typing effective means of externalising problem
  • By writing, reflective process emerges
  • Expression of feelings in the “now”
  • Communication by video link: for clients find it hard to travel
  • Computer-based/ online assessment: assessment purposes delivered on-screen
  • Online therapy sites:
  • Beating the Blues: intervention mild/ moderate levels of depression. Consists of characterisation (stories people have struggled overcome depression) + conversational self-help exercises
  • FearFighter: package developed use in anxiety
  • Moodgym site: self-help exercises promote psychological well-being
  • Text messaging: used frequent basis, consisten with favoured mode of communication
  • Apps:
  • Mood 24/7: rate mood regular basis throughout the day
  • Chat rooms: online sites where people communicate each other specific problem. Some include involvement counsellor, as a resource or monitor.
  • Virtual reality: experience different levels of severity of their problem. Therapist directly coach them in use coping strategies
  • Avatars: externalise/ express different aspect of self. Allows reflection/ insight

Self-help materials:

  • Active client: client active by reflecting. Effectiveness relies on capacity for self-healing
  • Categories bibliotherapy: explicit self-help manuals, understand resolve particular difficulty. Cognitive behavioural theoretical approach
  • Autobiographical/ biographical works: support/ insight/ hope
  • Fictional texts: life stories/ behavioural patterns/ relevant coping strategies
  • Value self-help: depends on context in which it is used

Combining formats:

  • Adding on (adjunctive interventions): assembling package
  • Stepped care: begins least intrusive/ intensive format --> ratches up to more demanding formats
  1. Access self-care materials
  2. Time-limited psychotherapy of generic nature
  3. Long-term, focused on specific disorder (empirically validated form of treatment)
  4. Inpatient hospital treatment
  • Adjunctive interventions: another form of help alongside therapy
  • Programmes/ communities: planned packages incorporate different formats

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