Psychological Therapy for Schizophrenia

    Cards (11)

    • Cognitive Behaviour Therapy & Schizophrenia
      - CBT can help a client make sense of their irrational cognitions (such as delusions and hallucinations) impact on their feelings and behaviour

      - this understanding can help clients manage symptoms such as hallucinations and make them less frightening and debilitating

      - this doesn't cure symptoms of schizophrenia but rather makes them manageable

      - CBT is also used to tackle anxiety and depression in patients with resistant delusions
    • CBT Techniques for Treating Schizophrenia
      - normalisation: teaching clients that auditory hallucinations are an extension of the ordinary experience of speaking words

      - challenging delusions: testing the likelihood of beliefs being true
    • Family Therapy
      therapy that treats the family as wells as the identifies patient (the member of the family who expresses the family's conflicts)

      - aims to improve the quality of communication and interaction between family members

      - there is a range of approaches to family therapy for schizophrenia, in keeping with psychological theories link double-bind and the schizophrenogenic mother

      - (Pharoah et al, 2012) identified a range of strategies used to try and improve the functioning of a family who has a member with schizophrenia:

      . reduce negative emotions

      . improves family's ability to help
    • Family Therapy: Reduces Negative Emotions
      - family therapy aims to reduce levels of expressed emotion (EE), especially anger and guilt which increase stress as reduced stress decreases the chance of a relapse
    • Improves Family's Ability to Help
      - family members are encouraged to form a therapeutic alliance whereby they agree on the aims of the therapy

      - the therapists also aim to improve members beliefs about schizophrenia as well as teaching them how to care for an individual with schizophrenia as well as maintain their own lives
    • Evidence of Effectiveness: CBT (Strength)
      - (Jauher et al, 2014) reviewed 34 studies using CBT with schizophrenia and found there is clear evidence for small but significant effects on both positive and negative symptoms

      - (Pontillo et al, 2016) found reductions in frequency and severity of auditory hallucinations

      - (NICE, 2019) and the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence both recommend CBT for treatment of schizophrenia

      - meaning both research and clinical experience support the benefits of CBT for schizophrenia
    • Quality of Evidence:Limitation
      - there are a wide range of techniques and symptoms included in studies

      - (Thomas, 2015) points out that different studies have involved different techniques and people with different combinations of positive/negative symptoms

      - the overall modest benefits for CBT for schizophrenia probably conceal a wide variety of effects of different CBT techniques on different symptoms

      - this makes it hard to say how effective CBT will be for a particular person with schizophrenia
    • Does CBT Cure?: Evaluation Extra
      - CBT may improve the life of people with schizophrenia but it doesn't actually 'cure' them

      - as a largely biological condition, we would expect psychological therapy of CBT just benefits people by improving their ability to live with schizophrenia

      - however studies show a reduction in the severity of both positive and negative symptoms , suggesting that CBT does more than enhance coping
    • Evidence of Effectiveness: Family Therapy (Strength)
      - (McFarlane, 2016)'s review of studies, showed that family therapy was one of the most consistently effective treatments for schizophrenia

      - relapse rates were found to be significantly reduced ( typically 50-60%)

      - McFarlane also concluded that using family therapy as mental health begins to decline is also promising

      - clinical advice from NICE recommends family therapy for everyone with a diagnosis of schizophrenia

      - meaning family therapy is likely to benefit people with both early and 'full-blown' schizophrenia
    • Benefit to the Whole Family: Strength
      - family therapy benefits the whole family not just the the identified patient

      - (Loban & Barrowclough, 2016) concluded these effects are important because families provide the bulk of care/support

      - by strengthening the functioning of a whole family, family therapy lessens the negative impact of schizophrenia and strengthens the family's ability to support the person with schizophrenia

      - this means family therapy has wider benefits beyond the obvious positive impact on the identified patient
    • Which Matters Most?: Evaluation Extra
      - because family therapy reduces relapse rates and makes families better be able to provide the bulk of care has huge economic benefits

      - this means the State doesn't need to pay so much

      - on the other hand, family therapy also has significant therapeutic benefits for people with schizophrenia and their families
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