Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) of Anxiety
-
Upload
david-walczyk -
Category
Design
-
view
2.745 -
download
0
description
Transcript of Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) of Anxiety
![Page 1: Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) of Anxiety](https://reader031.fdocuments.us/reader031/viewer/2022013114/5481c7c55806b5f2048b4597/html5/thumbnails/1.jpg)
David J. Walczyk, Ed.D.C.G. Jung Institute of NY
Cognitive (Behavioral) Therapy of Anxiety Disorders
![Page 2: Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) of Anxiety](https://reader031.fdocuments.us/reader031/viewer/2022013114/5481c7c55806b5f2048b4597/html5/thumbnails/2.jpg)
As they relate to the cognitive therapy of anxiety disorders...
Cognitive ModelGeneral Hypotheses
EtiologyCognitive InterventionCase Formulation : GAD
![Page 3: Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) of Anxiety](https://reader031.fdocuments.us/reader031/viewer/2022013114/5481c7c55806b5f2048b4597/html5/thumbnails/3.jpg)
Cognitive ModelGeneral Hypotheses
EtiologyCognitive InterventionCase Formulation : GAD
![Page 4: Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) of Anxiety](https://reader031.fdocuments.us/reader031/viewer/2022013114/5481c7c55806b5f2048b4597/html5/thumbnails/4.jpg)
“Modification of the exaggerated appraisals of threat, vulnerability, and safety seeking is the primary
objective of cognitive therapy for anxiety disorders.”
![Page 5: Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) of Anxiety](https://reader031.fdocuments.us/reader031/viewer/2022013114/5481c7c55806b5f2048b4597/html5/thumbnails/5.jpg)
“The goal of any cognitive intervention is deactivation of the hypervalent threat schemas and heightened
activation of more adaptive and realistic beliefs about threat and perceived ability to cope with one’s anxious
concerns.”
![Page 6: Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) of Anxiety](https://reader031.fdocuments.us/reader031/viewer/2022013114/5481c7c55806b5f2048b4597/html5/thumbnails/6.jpg)
![Page 7: Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) of Anxiety](https://reader031.fdocuments.us/reader031/viewer/2022013114/5481c7c55806b5f2048b4597/html5/thumbnails/7.jpg)
![Page 8: Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) of Anxiety](https://reader031.fdocuments.us/reader031/viewer/2022013114/5481c7c55806b5f2048b4597/html5/thumbnails/8.jpg)
Cognitive ModelGeneral Hypotheses
EtiologyCognitive InterventionCase Formulation : GAD
![Page 9: Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) of Anxiety](https://reader031.fdocuments.us/reader031/viewer/2022013114/5481c7c55806b5f2048b4597/html5/thumbnails/9.jpg)
1. Attentional threat biasSelective attentional bias for negative stimuli
2. Diminished attentional processing of safetyAutomatic attentional shift away from safety cues
3. Exaggerated threat appraisalsAutomatic evaluative process that exaggerates the threat
4. Threat-biased cognitive errorsCommit more cognitive errors while processing threatening stimuli
![Page 10: Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) of Anxiety](https://reader031.fdocuments.us/reader031/viewer/2022013114/5481c7c55806b5f2048b4597/html5/thumbnails/10.jpg)
5. Negative interpretation of anxietyGenerate more negative and threatening interpretations
of subjective feelings and symptoms
6. Elevated disorder-specific threat cognitionElevated frequency, intensity, and duration of
negative automatic thoughts and images
7. Ineffective defensive strategiesLess effective immediate defense strategies and
evaluate defensive strategies as less effective
8. Facilitated threat elaborationSelective bias threat even towards ambiguous stimuli
![Page 11: Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) of Anxiety](https://reader031.fdocuments.us/reader031/viewer/2022013114/5481c7c55806b5f2048b4597/html5/thumbnails/11.jpg)
9. Inhibited safety elaborationInhibitory bias of safety information relevant to
selective themes - fewer themes of safety
10. Detrimental cognitive compensatory strategies
E.g... worry has a greater adverse effect to enhancing threat salience
11. Elevated personal vulnerabilityLower-self confidence and greater perceived helplessness
in situations relevant to their selective threats
12. Enduring threat-related beliefsPreexisting maladaptive schemas about particular threats
or dangers and associated personal vulnerability
![Page 12: Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) of Anxiety](https://reader031.fdocuments.us/reader031/viewer/2022013114/5481c7c55806b5f2048b4597/html5/thumbnails/12.jpg)
Cognitive ModelGeneral Hypotheses
EtiologyCognitive InterventionCase Formulation : GAD
![Page 13: Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) of Anxiety](https://reader031.fdocuments.us/reader031/viewer/2022013114/5481c7c55806b5f2048b4597/html5/thumbnails/13.jpg)
“...vulnerability to anxiety disorders involves the interaction of multiple pathways emerging from constitutional, developmental, environmental,
personality, and information-processing domains.”
![Page 14: Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) of Anxiety](https://reader031.fdocuments.us/reader031/viewer/2022013114/5481c7c55806b5f2048b4597/html5/thumbnails/14.jpg)
![Page 15: Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) of Anxiety](https://reader031.fdocuments.us/reader031/viewer/2022013114/5481c7c55806b5f2048b4597/html5/thumbnails/15.jpg)
“Based on this framework for vulnerability, we...consider the empirical evidence for the two main
components of the model: an enduring sense of personal vulnerability and the presence of hypervalent threat
schemas.”
![Page 16: Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) of Anxiety](https://reader031.fdocuments.us/reader031/viewer/2022013114/5481c7c55806b5f2048b4597/html5/thumbnails/16.jpg)
Cognitive ModelGeneral Hypotheses
EtiologyCognitive InterventionCase Formulation : GAD
![Page 17: Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) of Anxiety](https://reader031.fdocuments.us/reader031/viewer/2022013114/5481c7c55806b5f2048b4597/html5/thumbnails/17.jpg)
“Cognitive interventions seek to shift the clients perspective from one of exaggerated danger and
personal vulnerability to a perspective of minimal acceptable threat and perceived ability to cope.”
![Page 18: Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) of Anxiety](https://reader031.fdocuments.us/reader031/viewer/2022013114/5481c7c55806b5f2048b4597/html5/thumbnails/18.jpg)
![Page 19: Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) of Anxiety](https://reader031.fdocuments.us/reader031/viewer/2022013114/5481c7c55806b5f2048b4597/html5/thumbnails/19.jpg)
What...
Shift threat focusTend to enter therapy believing that the cause of their anxiousness
is the situation that triggers their anxious episode
Focus on appraisals and beliefsAn information-processing system that exaggerates the probability and severity
of threat, minimizes personal ability to cope, and fails to recognize aspects of safety.
Modify biased threat, vulnerability, and safety appraisals and beliefs
Four key elements of faulty cognition : probability estimates, severity estimates, vulnerability estimates, and safety estimates
Normalize fear and anxietyNormalize in relation to others, normalize in relation to past experiences,
and normalize in relation to situations.
Strengthen personal efficacyCorrecting erroneous beliefs about personal vulnerability and
perceived inability to deal with anxious concerns.
Adaptive approach to safetyFaculty risk appraisal, enhance safety-seeking processing,
dysfunctional avoidance and safety-seeking behavior
![Page 20: Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) of Anxiety](https://reader031.fdocuments.us/reader031/viewer/2022013114/5481c7c55806b5f2048b4597/html5/thumbnails/20.jpg)
How...
Educating the clientDefine anxiety and fear, explain consequences, treatment goal, treatment strategy
Self-monitoring and the identification of anxious thoughts
Identify and record anxious behavior
Cognitive restructuringEvidence gathering, cost-benefit analysis, decatastrophizing, identifying
cognitive errors, generating alternatives, empirical hypothesis testing
Identifying thinking errorsTo reinforce the message to clients that threat perception are inaccurate
Generate and alternative explanationFrom rigidity to reflection
Empirical hypothesis-testingDevelopment and test hypothesis
![Page 21: Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) of Anxiety](https://reader031.fdocuments.us/reader031/viewer/2022013114/5481c7c55806b5f2048b4597/html5/thumbnails/21.jpg)
Emerging Hows...
Imaginal reprocessing and expressive writing*
Mindfulness, acceptance, and commitment*
![Page 22: Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) of Anxiety](https://reader031.fdocuments.us/reader031/viewer/2022013114/5481c7c55806b5f2048b4597/html5/thumbnails/22.jpg)
Cognitive ModelGeneral Hypotheses
EtiologyCognitive InterventionCase Formulation : GAD
![Page 23: Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) of Anxiety](https://reader031.fdocuments.us/reader031/viewer/2022013114/5481c7c55806b5f2048b4597/html5/thumbnails/23.jpg)
Primary goal of cognitive therapy of GAD...
“...reduction in frequency, intensity, and duration of worry episodes that would lead to an associated decrease in automatic anxious intrusive thoughts and generalized anxiety. This will be achieved by modifying the dysfunctional
appraisals and beliefs as well as the maladapative control strategies that are responsible for chronic worry.”
![Page 24: Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) of Anxiety](https://reader031.fdocuments.us/reader031/viewer/2022013114/5481c7c55806b5f2048b4597/html5/thumbnails/24.jpg)
![Page 25: Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) of Anxiety](https://reader031.fdocuments.us/reader031/viewer/2022013114/5481c7c55806b5f2048b4597/html5/thumbnails/25.jpg)
Case Formulation in conjunction with client...
1. Description of the primary worry concerns
2. Specification of current life goals and personal strivings
3. List of internal and external triggers of worry
4. Identification of metacognitive appraisals of worry of each worry concern
5 Description of idiosyncratic worry control profile
6. Extent of safety and search and negative problem orientation
7. Formulation of the underlying schematic organization responsible for chronic worry and generalized anxiety.
![Page 26: Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) of Anxiety](https://reader031.fdocuments.us/reader031/viewer/2022013114/5481c7c55806b5f2048b4597/html5/thumbnails/26.jpg)
Case Formulation in conjunction with client...
1. Focus on identifying the dysfunctional schemas and faulty metacognitive processes of worry.
2. Assess the client’s primary worried and associated anxious symptoms (use ADIS-IV to assess context of worry, presence of safety-seeking responses, and
degree of interference in daily life).
3. Identify client’s personal goals and current concerns.
4. Identify worry triggers (using the Worry Self-Monitoring Form B)
5. Identify client’s metacognitive appraisals of worry
6. Identify Worry Control Strategies using the Cognitive Response to Anxiety Checklist
7. Develop safety scripts and problem orientation
8. Identify core maladaptive schemas of threat, personal vulnerability, intolerance of uncertainty, and metacognitive beliefs about worry
![Page 27: Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) of Anxiety](https://reader031.fdocuments.us/reader031/viewer/2022013114/5481c7c55806b5f2048b4597/html5/thumbnails/27.jpg)
Primary source...
Cognitive Therapy of Anxiety DisordersScience and Practice
David A. Clark and Aaron T. Beck(2011)
![Page 28: Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) of Anxiety](https://reader031.fdocuments.us/reader031/viewer/2022013114/5481c7c55806b5f2048b4597/html5/thumbnails/28.jpg)
Thanks!