AO3: Behavioural treatments for phobias

Cards (15)

  • Brosnan and Thorpe
    Used systematic desensitisation to treat technophobia
  • Brosnan and Thorpe: First study
    Sample of 16 participants was used: 8 technophobics and 8 not, and a control group of 8 non-anxious participants. A 10 week systematic desensitisation programme was delivered to the computer-anxious participants.
  • Brosnan and Thorpe: Second study
    30 computer anxious participants were assigned to a treatment group or a non-treatment group. There was also a non-anxious control group of 59 participants.
  • Brosnan and Thorpe: Findings
    First study: computer anxiety and coping strategies were significantly improved in the computer-anxious group, becoming comparable to the non-anxious controls.
    Second study: Established over an academic year that the reduction in anxiety was 3x greater in the treated group than the non-treated group. By the end of the year, the treated group no longer differed from the controls, whilst the non-treated group remained significantly more anxious.
  • Brosnan and Thorpe: Conclusions
    Systematic desensitisation is effective in treating technophobia.
  • Brosnan and Thorpe: Evaluation
    It's not known whether the therapy had a long-term benefit in reducing technophobia. However, the success of the therapy suggests a major benefit in allowing technophobes to participate in an increasingly technologically-oriented world.
  • Wolpe (1960)
    Used flooding to remove a girls phobia of being in cars.
  • Wolpe: Process
    The girl was forced into a car and driven around for 4 hours until her hysteria was eradicated, demonstrating the effectiveness of the treatment.
  • Craske and Barlow
    Investigated treating agoraphobia.
  • Craske and Barlow: Outcome
    CSI in 60-80% of cases, in many cases however, improvement was only slight and 50% relapse within 6 months.
  • Social phobias tend to involve cognitive aspects- it's not just anxiety or avoidance but there are also unpleasant thoughts associated with the phobia. This makes then harder to treat- you have to understand you have learnt the phobia to unlearn it.
  • Craske and Barlow: Evaluation
    As relapse is highly likely, the treatment can be seen as ineffective in the long term.
  • Ost
    Found that flooding is a rapid treatment that often delivers rapid, immediate improvements, especially when a patient is encouraged to continue self-directed exposure to feared objects and situations outside of therapy sessions.
  • General Evaluations: Systematic desensitisation
    Suitable for everyone- doesn't require talking about what is going on. Less trauma.
    Some people like the gradual approach, more likely to finish treatment.
  • General Evaluations: Flooding
    Not suitable for children or people with learning difficulties.
    Traumatic.
    Issues with consent, cannot withdraw.