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Illness Cognitions And Cognitive-
Behavioral Approaches To Change
Behavior
By
Misha Riaz L1`F16BSSY0064
Iqra Khan L1F16BSSY0058
Contents
 What does it mean to be ill?
 Illness cognitions
 Cognitive dimensions of illness cognitions
 Self-regulatory model of illness
 Stages of self-regulatory model
 Why model is called self-regulatory?
 Using the self-regulatory model topredict outcomes
 Adjusting to Physical Illness
 The Theory of Cognitive Adaptation
 Cognitive-Behavioral Approaches To Change Behavior
 Cognitive Behavioral Therapy
 The Transtheoretica;l Model
What does it mean to be ill?
Dimensions of illness
 Not feeling normal → ‘I don’t feel right’
 Specific symptoms → physiological/psychological
 Consequences of illness →‘I can’t do what I usually do’
 Time line → how long the symptoms last
 The absence of health → not being healthy
Illness cognitions
“A patient’s own implicit common sense beliefs about their illness"
Illness cognitions provide patients with a framework for:
 Coping with their illness
 Understanding their illness
 What to look out for if they are becoming ill
Cognitive Dimensions Of Illness Cognitions
Given by Leventhal, for understanding and coping with illness
 Identity → label given to the illness (the medical diagnosis) and the
symptoms experienced
 The perceived cause of the illness → biological (virus) or
psychosocial (stress)
 Time line → how long the illness will last (acute, chronic)
 Consequences → the possible effects of the illness on life (physical,
emotional)
 Curability and controllability → the illness can be treated and cured and the
outcome of illness is controllable
Self-regulatory model of illnesscognitions
Stage 1:
Interpretation
• Symptom perception
• Social messages
Representation of
health threat
• Identity
• Cause
• Consequences
• Time line
• Cure/control
Emotional
response to health
threat
• Fear
• Anxiety
• depression
Stage 2: Coping
• Approach coping
• Avoidance coping
Stage 3:
Appraisal
• Was my coping
strategy effective?
Self-regulatory model of illnesscognitions
The model:
 is based on approaches to problem solving
 suggests that illnesses are dealt with in the same way as other
problems
Self-regulatory model of illnesscognitions
Stage 1: Interpretation
 Confronting with the problem of a potential illness through two channels:
 symptom perception (‘I have a pain in my chest’)
 individual differences: internally/externally focused
 influenced by mood, cognitions, environment
 social messages (‘the doctor has diagnosed this pain as angina’)
 health professional →formal diagnosis or a positive test result
 lay individuals → advices from colleagues, friends or family
Self-regulatory model of illnesscognitions
Representation of health threat
Illness cognitions are constructed according to 5 dimensions:
 identity
 cause
 consequences
 time line
 cure/control
Give the problem meaning and enable the individual to develop coping
strategies.
Self-regulatory model of illnesscognitions
Emotional response to health threat
Identification of the problem of illness will also result in changes in emotional state:
 fear
 anxiety
 Depression
Coping strategies also relate to the emotional
state of the individual.
Self-regulatory model of illnesscognitions
Stage 2: coping
Approaches to coping with illness:
 Coping with a diagnosis
 Coping with the crisis of illness
 Adjustment to physical illness.
Broad categories of coping strategies:
Approach coping (e.g. taking pills, going to the doctor)
Avoidance coping (e.g. denial, wishful thinking)
Self-regulatory model of illnesscognitions
Stage 3: Appraisal
Individuals evaluating:
 the effectiveness of the coping strategy
determining whether to continue with this strategy or whether to opt
for an alternative one
Why is the model called self-regulatory
 The 3 components of the model (interpretation, coping, appraisal) interrelate
in order to maintain the status quo (i.e. They regulate the self)
 If the individual’s health is disrupted by illness the individual is
motivated to return the balance back to normality
 Self-regulation involves the 3 processes interrelating in an ongoing and
dynamic fashion
Using the self-regulatory model topredict
outcomes
 Predicting adherence to treatment
 Predicting recovery from stroke
 Predicting recovery from myocardial infarction
Adjusting to Physical Illness
 Adjustment is a process that begins at the presentation of symptoms and
continues throughout the course of the illness and responds to changes in
illness status.
 Physical illness can be conceptualized as a stressor, the demands of which
depend upon the characteristics and severity of the illness
 The prevalence of psychological disorders is generally found to be
considerably higher amongst those with a variety of health problems.
 Nonetheless, a considerable number of patients who experience even the
most devastating of illnesses seem able to adjust to illness without
experiencing clinically significant psychological problems.
 The processes by which these people are able to adjust and, in many
cases, find positive meaning in their experiences, are important to
understand.
A Theory of Cognitive Adaptation
Shelly Taylor (1983), a leader in the field of health psychology research and
practice,
Research on 78 women diagnosed with breast cancer
During extensive interviews, women described changes that had occurred in
their lives since their breast cancer diagnosis
When asked to indicate if changes in their lives were positive or negative since
cancer diagnosis
 7% reported negative changes
 53% reported positive changes
A Theory of Cognitive Adaptation
Originally relying on responses from 78 women diagnosed with breast
cancer and their family members, she theorized that adjusting to life-
threatening events usually entails three processes:
 searching for meaning
 regaining mastery
 restoring self-esteem
Cont.…
Search for Meaning
 involves attempts at understanding why the event happened
 what it means to the present.
 For example, 95% of the women interviewed offered some explanation for why
their breast cancer had occurred, such as a stressful divorce or an injury to
their breast.
 In addition, over half the women reported that the having cancer had caused
them to reevaluate their lives.
Cont.….
Gaining A Sense Of Mastery
 Usually involves personal beliefs that a person can control the illness
 Keep it from occurring again.
 For example, many of the breast cancer patients' efforts at control were entirely mental.
 The most common belief reported was that a positive attitude would keep the cancer from
coming back.
 Women attempted to control their cancer by using meditation, imaging, self-hypnosis, and
positive thinking.
 Women also reported that they made dietary changes and eliminated medications like birth
control pills.
 Attempting to control side effects of treatment was another attempt at mastery reported by
these women.
Cont.…
Restoring Self-esteem
 As managed directly by doing things like taking a cruise or making a major
purchase,
 Indirectly by making social comparisons.
 Social comparisons means comparing one's personal circumstances with those
of others for purposes of self-evaluation.
 Virtually all of these women thought they were doing as well as or somewhat
better than other women coping with the same crisis.
 Even the women who were in the worst condition comforted themselves by the
fact that they were not actively dying or were not in pain.
Cognitive-Behavioral Approaches
Focus on the target behavior itself
-Conditions that elicit and maintain it
-Factors that enforce it
Focus on beliefs about health habits
-Goal to modify internal monologues interfering with behavior change.
Involves the patient as a "cotherapist"
-E.g., through self-monitoring, applying techniques
Advantages Of
Cognitive-Behavioral Approaches
 Multimodal approach- combine techniques to target all aspects of
problem
 Can individually tailor intervention plans
 Can target several health habits simultaneously
Cognitive behaviour therapy (CBT)
 An effective treatment approach for a range of mental and emotional health
issues, including anxiety, depression, health related problems, addiction etc.
 CBT aims to help you identify and challenge unhelpful thoughts and to learn
practical self-help strategies.
 These strategies are designed to bring about immediate positive changes in
your quality of life.
 CBT can be good for anyone who needs support to challenge unhelpful
thoughts that are preventing them from reaching their goals or living the life
they want to live.
 CBT aims to show you how your thinking affects your mood. It teaches you to
think in a less negative way about yourself and your life. It is based on the
understanding that thinking negatively is a habit that, like any other habit, can
be broken.
When CBT is useful
CBT is used to treat a range of psychological problems including:
 anxiety
 anxiety disorders
 depression
 low self-esteem
 irrational fears
 hypochondria
 substance misuse, such as smoking, drinking or other drug use
 problem gambling
 eating disorders
 insomnia
 marriage or relationship problems
 certain emotional or behavioural problems in children or teenagers.
CBT and Thoughts, Feelings and Behaviours
 The main focus of CBT is that thoughts, feelings and behaviours
combine to influence a person’s quality of life
 CBT aims to teach people that it is possible to have control over
their thoughts, feelings and behaviours.
 CBT helps the person to challenge and overcome automatic beliefs,
and use practical strategies to change or modify their behaviour.
The result is more positive feelings, which in turn lead to more
positive thoughts and behaviours.
CBT for Health Problems
 CBT interventions can increase coping with difficult disorders, reduce negative
emotions that exacerbate medical problems. A large body of research supports
the use of CBT for chronic pain, heart disease, gastrointestinal problems, and
high blood pressure
 CBT for health problems addresses the mind-body connection by suggesting a
role for the mind in the cause as well as the treatment of illness.
 CBT maintains that the mind and body interact
 CBT suggests that illness can be caused by combination of biological,
psychological, and social factors. This more modern conceptualization is known
as the biopsychosocial model of health and illness.
Goals of CBT for Health Problems
 Empowering the Patient
 Empowering the Treatment
 Taking Charge of Treatment
CBT for Depression
 CBT can effectively treat people with depression, helping people learn skills to reverse
negative thinking habits.
 Numerous studies have found Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) for depression to be
as effective as antidepressant medication in reducing depression symptoms, and more
effective than antidepressant medication in keeping depression symptoms from
reoccurring after the end of treatment
 75% of individuals diagnosed with clinical depression experience a significant decrease
in symptoms after only 12- 20 sessions of CBT
 85% of individuals who receive both CBT for depression and antidepressant medication
experience a significant decrease in depression symptoms and learn how to overcome
depression.
 CBT helps people with depression restructure negative thought patterns, teaching
them to interpret their environment and interactions with others in a positive and
realistic way. It may also help you recognize other factors, such as maladaptive
behaviors, that may be making the depression worse.
CBT Treatment for depression can involve
 Assessment and re-evaluation of problematic ways of thinking
 Increasing behaviors that naturally promote pleasure and mastery
 Assertiveness training
 Treatment for insomnia
 Mindfulness techniques
 Social Skills Training
 Problem Solving techniques
 Treatment for underlying anxiety
 Working effectively toward life goals
CBT for Quitting Smoking/ alcohol/ drug use
 CBT treatment does not support the idea that addiction is a lifelong disease.
Instead, addictions are viewed as over-learned behaviors that serve important
functions.
 The goal of Cognitive behavioral treatment is learning new more effective
behaviors to take the place of the addiction behaviors
 Cognitive behavioral therapy for quitting smoking focuses on changing
people’s reactions to their urges to smoke.
 This occurs through changing thoughts and behaviors.
 Changing thoughts occurs by examining unhelpful thought patterns that lead
to smoking, and then learning more effective patterns.
 Learning alternate behaviors involves identifying the functions that smoking
serves, and replacing the smoking with other behaviors that serve the same
function.
CBT for quitting smoking or alcohol and drug use may
include
 Cognitive restructuring
 Mindfulness training
 Stimulus control
 Self-monitoring
 Functional analysis
 Impulse tolerance training
 Emotion regulation training
CBT for Eating Disorders
An eating disorder is a psychological problem that significantly interferes
with eating and/or overall nutrition. This can include
restricting one’s diet to small amounts of food
extreme overeating
engaging in unhealthy ways of regulating weight, such as over-exercise,
laxatives, or vomiting.
Eating disorders generally fall into three types
 binge-eating disorder
 Bulimia
 anorexia nervosa
These disorders can become quite serious and have the potential to result
in lasting physical damage or death.
 Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) has proven to be the most clinically
effective treatment for all eating disorders.
 It was found to be the briefest treatment, and CBT was found to be associated
with the lowest relapse rates. Rather than focusing on causes of the disorder
from the distant past, cognitive behavioral therapy focuses on immediate
conditions that maintain eating disorders. CBT for eating disorders varies by
disorder
CBT treatment for eating disorders involves several of the following components:
 Cognitive restructuring
 Behavioral chain analysis
 Emotion regulation strategies
 Distress tolerance training
 Mindfulness
Cognitive-Behavioral Techniques
Self-monitoring
Classical conditioning
Operant conditioning
Modeling
Self-reinforcement
Contingency contracting
Cognitive restructuring
Relapse prevention
Self-Monitoring
Assessment of
 Frequency of target behavior
 What comes before/after behavior
 Cognitions and emotions associated with behavior-
This is used as first step toward behavior change
 Helps to get a sense of circumstances under which behavior occurs to inform
intervention planning
 Increased awareness may produce behavior change in and of itself
Classical Conditioning
Pairing unconditioned response with new stimulus produces
conditioned effect
Used in alcoholism treatment
 Drug Antabuse (unconditioned stimulus) produces nausea and
vomiting (unconditioned response) when taken with alcohol
 Over time, alcohol associated with nausea/vomiting and elicits
same response (conditioned response) without drug
Operant Conditioning
 Pairs voluntary behavior with systematic consequences
(reinforcement)
 Positive reinforcement following behavior increases likelihood of
behavior occurring again
 Withdrawing reinforcement or punishing behavior decreases
likelihood of behavior occurring
 Interventions alter reinforcement maintaining poor health behavior,
or reinforce desired behavior
Self-Reinforcement
Individual systematically rewards/punishes self to increase/decrease occurrence of
target behavior
Self-reward
 Positive self-reward- add desirable consequence to successful modification of
behavior
 Negative self-reward- remove aversive factor in environment after successful
modification
Self-punishment
 Positive self-punishment- administer unpleasant stimulus following undesirable
behavior
 Negative self-punishment- withdraw positive reinforcers in environment following
undesirable behavior
Contingency Contracting
 Form of self-reinforcement in which individual contracts with
another person regarding rewards/punishments contingent on
performance/nonperformance of target behavior
 Example: person giving therapist money to give them for every
week of successful dieting
Cognitive Restructuring
Internal monologues: cognitions involving self-criticism/self -praise
Involves training to recognize and modify internal monologues associated
with health behavior
E.g. statements of self-efficacy when experiencing temptation; self-
reinforcing statements following resistance to temptation; self-criticism
following set-backs
Training involves:
 Self-monitoring to identify monologues
 Modification of monologues
 Identify situations in which relapse likely and develop coping skills to
manage situations/events
 Example: engage in constructive self-talk to resist temptation;
eliminate environmental cues
 May involve exposure to such situations to practice use of coping
skills
 Can increase self-efficacy
Relapse Prevention
The Transtheoretical Model
 Developed by Prochaska and DiClemente in the late 1970s.
 Research was being conducted on the experiences of smokers,
 some who quit smoking on their own
 some who had to seek treatment.
 They wanted to understand why people quit on their own.
 Research concluded that people quit smoking when they were ready
Stages
Pre-Contemplation
 People do not intend to take action in the near future.
 Completely unaware that their lifestyle is problematic and may produce
negative consequences.
 Places more emphasis on the cons than the pros of changing behaviour.
Contemplation
 The intention is there to start living a healthy behaviour in the foreseeable
future (in the next 6 months).
 People are now made aware that their behaviour is unhealthy and can lead to
serious consequences.
 A more thoughtful and equal approach is taken to the pros and cons however,
the person may be a bit reluctant to change their behaviour.
Cont…
Preparation
 People are ready to take action within the next 30 days.
 Small efforts are being made as they believe that it will lead to a
healthier life.
Action
 People have changed their behaviour over the past six months and
intends to continue to maintain those changes.
 Changes can be seen when people modify their problematic
behaviour or adapt to healthier behaviors.
Maintenance
 People have changed and stuck to their new or modified behavioral
practices for the past six months and intend to continue.
 They make every effort not to relapse into earlier stages.
Termination
 People have no desire to return to their previous behaviour and are
sure they will not relapse.
Cont…
Process of Change
To progress through the stages of change, people apply cognitive, affective,
and evaluative processes. These processes result in strategies that help
people make and maintain change.
 Consciousness Raising - Increasing awareness about the healthy
behavior.
 Dramatic Relief - Emotional arousal about the health behavior, whether
positive or negative arousal.
 Self-Reevaluation - Self reappraisal to realize the healthy behavior is part
of who they want to be.
 Environmental Reevaluation - Social reappraisal to realize how their
unhealthy behavior affects others.
Cont…
Social Liberation - Environmental opportunities that exist to show society is
supportive of the healthy behavior
Self-Liberation - Commitment to change behavior based on the belief that
achievement of the healthy behavior is possible.
Helping Relationships - Finding supportive relationships that encourage the
desired change.
Counter-Conditioning - Substituting healthy behaviors and thoughts for
unhealthy behaviors and thoughts.
Reinforcement Management - Rewarding the positive behavior and reducing
the rewards that come from negative behavior.
Stimulus Control - Re-engineering the environment to have reminders and cues
that support and encourage the healthy behavior and remove those that
encourage the unhealthy behavior.
Limitations
 Ignores the social context in which change occurs such as the socioeconomic
status (SES) and income.
 The lines between the stages can be arbitrary with no set criteria of how to
determine a person's stage of change.
 The questionnaires that have been developed to assign a person to a stage of
change are not always standardized or validated.
 There is no clear sense for how much time is needed for each stage, or how
long a person can remain in a stage.
 The model assumes that individuals make coherent and logical plans in their
decision-making process when this is not always true.
Thank You and
Stay Healthy
http://college.cengage.com/psychology/engler/personality_theories/7e
/students/index.html
http://sphweb.bumc.bu.edu/otlt/MPH-Modules/SB/SB721-
Models/SB721- Models6.html
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oO80XyBDrl0
https://www.prochange.com/transtheoretical-model-of-behavior-change
file:///C:/Users/hp/Downloads/3.%20Illness%20cognition%20(3).pdf
https://quizlet.com/98102968/cognitive-behavioral-approaches-to-health-
behavior-change-3-flash-cards/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16112783

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Illness cognition and cognitive behavioral approches

  • 1. Illness Cognitions And Cognitive- Behavioral Approaches To Change Behavior By Misha Riaz L1`F16BSSY0064 Iqra Khan L1F16BSSY0058
  • 2. Contents  What does it mean to be ill?  Illness cognitions  Cognitive dimensions of illness cognitions  Self-regulatory model of illness  Stages of self-regulatory model  Why model is called self-regulatory?  Using the self-regulatory model topredict outcomes  Adjusting to Physical Illness  The Theory of Cognitive Adaptation  Cognitive-Behavioral Approaches To Change Behavior  Cognitive Behavioral Therapy  The Transtheoretica;l Model
  • 3. What does it mean to be ill? Dimensions of illness  Not feeling normal → ‘I don’t feel right’  Specific symptoms → physiological/psychological  Consequences of illness →‘I can’t do what I usually do’  Time line → how long the symptoms last  The absence of health → not being healthy
  • 4. Illness cognitions “A patient’s own implicit common sense beliefs about their illness" Illness cognitions provide patients with a framework for:  Coping with their illness  Understanding their illness  What to look out for if they are becoming ill
  • 5. Cognitive Dimensions Of Illness Cognitions Given by Leventhal, for understanding and coping with illness  Identity → label given to the illness (the medical diagnosis) and the symptoms experienced  The perceived cause of the illness → biological (virus) or psychosocial (stress)  Time line → how long the illness will last (acute, chronic)  Consequences → the possible effects of the illness on life (physical, emotional)  Curability and controllability → the illness can be treated and cured and the outcome of illness is controllable
  • 6. Self-regulatory model of illnesscognitions Stage 1: Interpretation • Symptom perception • Social messages Representation of health threat • Identity • Cause • Consequences • Time line • Cure/control Emotional response to health threat • Fear • Anxiety • depression Stage 2: Coping • Approach coping • Avoidance coping Stage 3: Appraisal • Was my coping strategy effective?
  • 7. Self-regulatory model of illnesscognitions The model:  is based on approaches to problem solving  suggests that illnesses are dealt with in the same way as other problems
  • 8. Self-regulatory model of illnesscognitions Stage 1: Interpretation  Confronting with the problem of a potential illness through two channels:  symptom perception (‘I have a pain in my chest’)  individual differences: internally/externally focused  influenced by mood, cognitions, environment  social messages (‘the doctor has diagnosed this pain as angina’)  health professional →formal diagnosis or a positive test result  lay individuals → advices from colleagues, friends or family
  • 9. Self-regulatory model of illnesscognitions Representation of health threat Illness cognitions are constructed according to 5 dimensions:  identity  cause  consequences  time line  cure/control Give the problem meaning and enable the individual to develop coping strategies.
  • 10. Self-regulatory model of illnesscognitions Emotional response to health threat Identification of the problem of illness will also result in changes in emotional state:  fear  anxiety  Depression Coping strategies also relate to the emotional state of the individual.
  • 11. Self-regulatory model of illnesscognitions Stage 2: coping Approaches to coping with illness:  Coping with a diagnosis  Coping with the crisis of illness  Adjustment to physical illness. Broad categories of coping strategies: Approach coping (e.g. taking pills, going to the doctor) Avoidance coping (e.g. denial, wishful thinking)
  • 12. Self-regulatory model of illnesscognitions Stage 3: Appraisal Individuals evaluating:  the effectiveness of the coping strategy determining whether to continue with this strategy or whether to opt for an alternative one
  • 13. Why is the model called self-regulatory  The 3 components of the model (interpretation, coping, appraisal) interrelate in order to maintain the status quo (i.e. They regulate the self)  If the individual’s health is disrupted by illness the individual is motivated to return the balance back to normality  Self-regulation involves the 3 processes interrelating in an ongoing and dynamic fashion
  • 14. Using the self-regulatory model topredict outcomes  Predicting adherence to treatment  Predicting recovery from stroke  Predicting recovery from myocardial infarction
  • 15. Adjusting to Physical Illness  Adjustment is a process that begins at the presentation of symptoms and continues throughout the course of the illness and responds to changes in illness status.  Physical illness can be conceptualized as a stressor, the demands of which depend upon the characteristics and severity of the illness  The prevalence of psychological disorders is generally found to be considerably higher amongst those with a variety of health problems.  Nonetheless, a considerable number of patients who experience even the most devastating of illnesses seem able to adjust to illness without experiencing clinically significant psychological problems.  The processes by which these people are able to adjust and, in many cases, find positive meaning in their experiences, are important to understand.
  • 16. A Theory of Cognitive Adaptation Shelly Taylor (1983), a leader in the field of health psychology research and practice, Research on 78 women diagnosed with breast cancer During extensive interviews, women described changes that had occurred in their lives since their breast cancer diagnosis When asked to indicate if changes in their lives were positive or negative since cancer diagnosis  7% reported negative changes  53% reported positive changes
  • 17. A Theory of Cognitive Adaptation Originally relying on responses from 78 women diagnosed with breast cancer and their family members, she theorized that adjusting to life- threatening events usually entails three processes:  searching for meaning  regaining mastery  restoring self-esteem
  • 18. Cont.… Search for Meaning  involves attempts at understanding why the event happened  what it means to the present.  For example, 95% of the women interviewed offered some explanation for why their breast cancer had occurred, such as a stressful divorce or an injury to their breast.  In addition, over half the women reported that the having cancer had caused them to reevaluate their lives.
  • 19. Cont.…. Gaining A Sense Of Mastery  Usually involves personal beliefs that a person can control the illness  Keep it from occurring again.  For example, many of the breast cancer patients' efforts at control were entirely mental.  The most common belief reported was that a positive attitude would keep the cancer from coming back.  Women attempted to control their cancer by using meditation, imaging, self-hypnosis, and positive thinking.  Women also reported that they made dietary changes and eliminated medications like birth control pills.  Attempting to control side effects of treatment was another attempt at mastery reported by these women.
  • 20. Cont.… Restoring Self-esteem  As managed directly by doing things like taking a cruise or making a major purchase,  Indirectly by making social comparisons.  Social comparisons means comparing one's personal circumstances with those of others for purposes of self-evaluation.  Virtually all of these women thought they were doing as well as or somewhat better than other women coping with the same crisis.  Even the women who were in the worst condition comforted themselves by the fact that they were not actively dying or were not in pain.
  • 21. Cognitive-Behavioral Approaches Focus on the target behavior itself -Conditions that elicit and maintain it -Factors that enforce it Focus on beliefs about health habits -Goal to modify internal monologues interfering with behavior change. Involves the patient as a "cotherapist" -E.g., through self-monitoring, applying techniques
  • 22. Advantages Of Cognitive-Behavioral Approaches  Multimodal approach- combine techniques to target all aspects of problem  Can individually tailor intervention plans  Can target several health habits simultaneously
  • 23. Cognitive behaviour therapy (CBT)  An effective treatment approach for a range of mental and emotional health issues, including anxiety, depression, health related problems, addiction etc.  CBT aims to help you identify and challenge unhelpful thoughts and to learn practical self-help strategies.  These strategies are designed to bring about immediate positive changes in your quality of life.  CBT can be good for anyone who needs support to challenge unhelpful thoughts that are preventing them from reaching their goals or living the life they want to live.  CBT aims to show you how your thinking affects your mood. It teaches you to think in a less negative way about yourself and your life. It is based on the understanding that thinking negatively is a habit that, like any other habit, can be broken.
  • 24. When CBT is useful CBT is used to treat a range of psychological problems including:  anxiety  anxiety disorders  depression  low self-esteem  irrational fears  hypochondria  substance misuse, such as smoking, drinking or other drug use  problem gambling  eating disorders  insomnia  marriage or relationship problems  certain emotional or behavioural problems in children or teenagers.
  • 25. CBT and Thoughts, Feelings and Behaviours  The main focus of CBT is that thoughts, feelings and behaviours combine to influence a person’s quality of life  CBT aims to teach people that it is possible to have control over their thoughts, feelings and behaviours.  CBT helps the person to challenge and overcome automatic beliefs, and use practical strategies to change or modify their behaviour. The result is more positive feelings, which in turn lead to more positive thoughts and behaviours.
  • 26. CBT for Health Problems  CBT interventions can increase coping with difficult disorders, reduce negative emotions that exacerbate medical problems. A large body of research supports the use of CBT for chronic pain, heart disease, gastrointestinal problems, and high blood pressure  CBT for health problems addresses the mind-body connection by suggesting a role for the mind in the cause as well as the treatment of illness.  CBT maintains that the mind and body interact  CBT suggests that illness can be caused by combination of biological, psychological, and social factors. This more modern conceptualization is known as the biopsychosocial model of health and illness.
  • 27. Goals of CBT for Health Problems  Empowering the Patient  Empowering the Treatment  Taking Charge of Treatment
  • 28. CBT for Depression  CBT can effectively treat people with depression, helping people learn skills to reverse negative thinking habits.  Numerous studies have found Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) for depression to be as effective as antidepressant medication in reducing depression symptoms, and more effective than antidepressant medication in keeping depression symptoms from reoccurring after the end of treatment  75% of individuals diagnosed with clinical depression experience a significant decrease in symptoms after only 12- 20 sessions of CBT  85% of individuals who receive both CBT for depression and antidepressant medication experience a significant decrease in depression symptoms and learn how to overcome depression.  CBT helps people with depression restructure negative thought patterns, teaching them to interpret their environment and interactions with others in a positive and realistic way. It may also help you recognize other factors, such as maladaptive behaviors, that may be making the depression worse.
  • 29. CBT Treatment for depression can involve  Assessment and re-evaluation of problematic ways of thinking  Increasing behaviors that naturally promote pleasure and mastery  Assertiveness training  Treatment for insomnia  Mindfulness techniques  Social Skills Training  Problem Solving techniques  Treatment for underlying anxiety  Working effectively toward life goals
  • 30. CBT for Quitting Smoking/ alcohol/ drug use  CBT treatment does not support the idea that addiction is a lifelong disease. Instead, addictions are viewed as over-learned behaviors that serve important functions.  The goal of Cognitive behavioral treatment is learning new more effective behaviors to take the place of the addiction behaviors  Cognitive behavioral therapy for quitting smoking focuses on changing people’s reactions to their urges to smoke.  This occurs through changing thoughts and behaviors.  Changing thoughts occurs by examining unhelpful thought patterns that lead to smoking, and then learning more effective patterns.  Learning alternate behaviors involves identifying the functions that smoking serves, and replacing the smoking with other behaviors that serve the same function.
  • 31. CBT for quitting smoking or alcohol and drug use may include  Cognitive restructuring  Mindfulness training  Stimulus control  Self-monitoring  Functional analysis  Impulse tolerance training  Emotion regulation training
  • 32. CBT for Eating Disorders An eating disorder is a psychological problem that significantly interferes with eating and/or overall nutrition. This can include restricting one’s diet to small amounts of food extreme overeating engaging in unhealthy ways of regulating weight, such as over-exercise, laxatives, or vomiting. Eating disorders generally fall into three types  binge-eating disorder  Bulimia  anorexia nervosa These disorders can become quite serious and have the potential to result in lasting physical damage or death.
  • 33.  Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) has proven to be the most clinically effective treatment for all eating disorders.  It was found to be the briefest treatment, and CBT was found to be associated with the lowest relapse rates. Rather than focusing on causes of the disorder from the distant past, cognitive behavioral therapy focuses on immediate conditions that maintain eating disorders. CBT for eating disorders varies by disorder CBT treatment for eating disorders involves several of the following components:  Cognitive restructuring  Behavioral chain analysis  Emotion regulation strategies  Distress tolerance training  Mindfulness
  • 34. Cognitive-Behavioral Techniques Self-monitoring Classical conditioning Operant conditioning Modeling Self-reinforcement Contingency contracting Cognitive restructuring Relapse prevention
  • 35. Self-Monitoring Assessment of  Frequency of target behavior  What comes before/after behavior  Cognitions and emotions associated with behavior- This is used as first step toward behavior change  Helps to get a sense of circumstances under which behavior occurs to inform intervention planning  Increased awareness may produce behavior change in and of itself
  • 36. Classical Conditioning Pairing unconditioned response with new stimulus produces conditioned effect Used in alcoholism treatment  Drug Antabuse (unconditioned stimulus) produces nausea and vomiting (unconditioned response) when taken with alcohol  Over time, alcohol associated with nausea/vomiting and elicits same response (conditioned response) without drug
  • 37. Operant Conditioning  Pairs voluntary behavior with systematic consequences (reinforcement)  Positive reinforcement following behavior increases likelihood of behavior occurring again  Withdrawing reinforcement or punishing behavior decreases likelihood of behavior occurring  Interventions alter reinforcement maintaining poor health behavior, or reinforce desired behavior
  • 38. Self-Reinforcement Individual systematically rewards/punishes self to increase/decrease occurrence of target behavior Self-reward  Positive self-reward- add desirable consequence to successful modification of behavior  Negative self-reward- remove aversive factor in environment after successful modification Self-punishment  Positive self-punishment- administer unpleasant stimulus following undesirable behavior  Negative self-punishment- withdraw positive reinforcers in environment following undesirable behavior
  • 39. Contingency Contracting  Form of self-reinforcement in which individual contracts with another person regarding rewards/punishments contingent on performance/nonperformance of target behavior  Example: person giving therapist money to give them for every week of successful dieting
  • 40. Cognitive Restructuring Internal monologues: cognitions involving self-criticism/self -praise Involves training to recognize and modify internal monologues associated with health behavior E.g. statements of self-efficacy when experiencing temptation; self- reinforcing statements following resistance to temptation; self-criticism following set-backs Training involves:  Self-monitoring to identify monologues  Modification of monologues
  • 41.  Identify situations in which relapse likely and develop coping skills to manage situations/events  Example: engage in constructive self-talk to resist temptation; eliminate environmental cues  May involve exposure to such situations to practice use of coping skills  Can increase self-efficacy Relapse Prevention
  • 42. The Transtheoretical Model  Developed by Prochaska and DiClemente in the late 1970s.  Research was being conducted on the experiences of smokers,  some who quit smoking on their own  some who had to seek treatment.  They wanted to understand why people quit on their own.  Research concluded that people quit smoking when they were ready
  • 43. Stages Pre-Contemplation  People do not intend to take action in the near future.  Completely unaware that their lifestyle is problematic and may produce negative consequences.  Places more emphasis on the cons than the pros of changing behaviour. Contemplation  The intention is there to start living a healthy behaviour in the foreseeable future (in the next 6 months).  People are now made aware that their behaviour is unhealthy and can lead to serious consequences.  A more thoughtful and equal approach is taken to the pros and cons however, the person may be a bit reluctant to change their behaviour.
  • 44. Cont… Preparation  People are ready to take action within the next 30 days.  Small efforts are being made as they believe that it will lead to a healthier life. Action  People have changed their behaviour over the past six months and intends to continue to maintain those changes.  Changes can be seen when people modify their problematic behaviour or adapt to healthier behaviors.
  • 45. Maintenance  People have changed and stuck to their new or modified behavioral practices for the past six months and intend to continue.  They make every effort not to relapse into earlier stages. Termination  People have no desire to return to their previous behaviour and are sure they will not relapse. Cont…
  • 46. Process of Change To progress through the stages of change, people apply cognitive, affective, and evaluative processes. These processes result in strategies that help people make and maintain change.  Consciousness Raising - Increasing awareness about the healthy behavior.  Dramatic Relief - Emotional arousal about the health behavior, whether positive or negative arousal.  Self-Reevaluation - Self reappraisal to realize the healthy behavior is part of who they want to be.  Environmental Reevaluation - Social reappraisal to realize how their unhealthy behavior affects others.
  • 47. Cont… Social Liberation - Environmental opportunities that exist to show society is supportive of the healthy behavior Self-Liberation - Commitment to change behavior based on the belief that achievement of the healthy behavior is possible. Helping Relationships - Finding supportive relationships that encourage the desired change. Counter-Conditioning - Substituting healthy behaviors and thoughts for unhealthy behaviors and thoughts. Reinforcement Management - Rewarding the positive behavior and reducing the rewards that come from negative behavior. Stimulus Control - Re-engineering the environment to have reminders and cues that support and encourage the healthy behavior and remove those that encourage the unhealthy behavior.
  • 48. Limitations  Ignores the social context in which change occurs such as the socioeconomic status (SES) and income.  The lines between the stages can be arbitrary with no set criteria of how to determine a person's stage of change.  The questionnaires that have been developed to assign a person to a stage of change are not always standardized or validated.  There is no clear sense for how much time is needed for each stage, or how long a person can remain in a stage.  The model assumes that individuals make coherent and logical plans in their decision-making process when this is not always true.