Various Treatment Approaches

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Psychotherapy

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Use of face-to-face discussions to define and resolve personal problems. Types include:

•  Individual Therapy – A therapist works one-on-one with the client using a variety of treatment methods to sort out the problems and find resolutions.

•  Psychoanalysis – Places emphasis on linking early childhood memories and events to current behaviors. It involves a basic rebuilding and modifying of a patient’s personality to overcome psychological problems. Two drawbacks to this approach are that it takes a long time and it’s very costly.

•  Group Therapy – An approach in which a therapist conducts treatment in a group setting of 6-12 members. Through this supportive environment, members help one another resolve their problems.

•  Family Therapy – A type of counseling provided to two or more family members to assist a troubled individual and/or promote better functioning of the family unit. The interaction among members serves as the key to resolving conflicts.

•  Couple Therapy – Helps couples understand how conflicts get expressed by their interactions with each other. The goal is to develop a more rewarding relationship.

•  Play Therapy – Most often used with young children. Uses play with dolls or puppets to identify and resolve problems.

•  Behavior Modification – Uses techniques, such as relaxation training, biofeedback, positive reinforcement, punishment, and altering triggers to teach new substitute behaviors. The emphasis is on altering outward behavior rather than the resolution of early childhood events.

•  Cognitive Behavioral Therapy – A therapist helps a person identify unhealthy patterns of thought and how they may be causing self-destructive beliefs and behaviors. The person and therapist work together to develop constructive ways of thinking that will produce healthier behaviors and beliefs.

•  Hypnotherapy – A state of heightened suggestibility that allows the client to tune out unimportant information and focus only on what the hypnotherapist is saying. The client then is given suggestions to change personal behavior, i.e., lose weight, manage stress, or overcome fears.

Biomedical Therapies

•  Drug Therapy – Uses medicines, such as antidepressants and tranquilizers to help correct chemical imbalances, mood, and/or thinking disorders. Drug therapy is often used in conjunction with other treatment approaches.

•  Electroconvulsive Therapy (ECT) – Low “doses” of electrical energy currents are delivered to a patient’s brain. ECT is used only for certain extreme conditions, such as chronic depression or aggression that has not responded to other treatment methods.

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