What is it?
What is it? part 2
Interventions/ Techniques
True/False
Interventions & Techniques (part 2)
100

What does CBT stand for?

What is Cognitive Behavioral Therapy

100

What does NAT stand for?

What is negative automatic thought
100

What is one way of helping a person deal with NATs?

What is challenge by finding evidence contrary to the NAT

100

CBT focuses on past trauma

What is false

100

What are some relaxation/stress reduction techniques?

What are

1. Breathing techniques

2. Mindfulness

3. Meditation

4. Progressive muscle relaxation

5. Grounding skills

6. Guided imagery/visualization

7. Thought diffusion

8. Use of senses

200

What is the name of a behavior therapy similar to CBT?

What is DBT or dialectical behavioral therapy

200

What does CBT do?

What is address underlying thought patterns that contribute to distressing feelings/behaviors and work to change/challenge thought patterns to decrease distressing feelings/behaviors

200

What is cognitive restructuring/reframing?

What is a technique that is used to help people challenge and change irrational thoughts

200

CBT relies on a good client therapist relatonship

What is true

200

What are cognitive disortions?

What are irrational thoughts/beliefs that contribute to our feelings and unwanted behaviors

Sometimes referred to as thinking errors

300

What is a major requirement of CBT treatment?

What is doing homework/thought monitoring/etc

300

How many steps are there in Cognitive restructuring?

A) 3

B) 4

C) 5

D) 6

What is B:

1. identify difficult/distressing situations or conditions

2. Become aware of your thoughts, feelings/emotions, beliefs and behaviors

3. Identify negative or inaccurate thinking

4. Reshape or restructure negative or inaccurate thinking

300

What is behavioral activation?

What is an approach that focuses on using behaviors to activate pleasant emotions or a sense of accomplishment.

300

CBT is a one size fits all?

What is false

300

What are three techniques used in cognitive restructuring?

What are:

1. Socratic questioning

2. Decatastrophizing

3. Putting thoughts on trial

400

What are the three components of CBT?

What are thoughts, feelings, and behaviors

400

What are the parts (5) of the ABCDE model in REBT (a form of CBT)?

What are 

Activating Event (something happens)

Beliefs (you have a NAT or AT about the situation)

Consequences (you have feelings or behaviors as a consequence of the belief)

Disputation of beliefs (challenge your beliefs to create new consequences)

Effective new beliefs (adoption and implementation of new adaptive beliefs)

400

What is exposure and behavioral experiments?

What are:

Exposure: process for reducing fear and anxiety responses

Behavioral Experiments: process for testing accuracy of a person's beliefs/thoughts/behaviors or to test new, more adaptive beliefs/behaviors

400

CBT is only 50% effective

What is false. CBT has a 60-90% effectiveness, the more invested in treatment you are, the more your success rates increase

400

What is ERP?


Bonus for 100 extra points: what is a hierarchy and what is it used for?

What is exposure and response prevention

An exposure hierarchy is a list of scenarios/things we rate from least-distressing to most-distressing. 

We use an exposure hierarchy to confront our fears from least-distressing to most-distressing 

500

Who developed CBT?

Who is Aaron Beck

500

CBT is ___________ for the treatment of many mental health diagnoses (eating disorders, anxiety, depression, etc).

What is evidence based

500

What are the components (7) of a thought record?

What are:

Date/Time

Situation

NATs

Emotions

Behavior 

Alternative Response

Outcome

500

CBT is an easy process that takes little work/effort

What is false. CBT requires homework, personal work/effort, and you may experience times with increase symptoms before they resolve
500

What is habituation and inhibitory learning?

What are:

1. habituation: the process by which anxiety naturally declines over time during and between exposures

2. inhibitory learning: the process by which the brain learns something new (new thought/belief/tolerance of distress)