Therapy Approaches
Therapy Techniques & Methods
Biomedical & Drug Treatments
Mental Health Professionals
Research, Concepts & Effectiveness
100

This approach focuses on unconscious conflicts and early childhood experiences. In order to get to this understanding, the therapist might use interpretations of these. 

What is psychoanalytic? 

Dreams?

100

This technique is helpful for Seasonal Affective Disorder. 

What is Light Exposure Therapy?

100

This term refers to the use of drugs to treat psychological disorders.

What is psychopharmacology?

100

This professional is trained in both counseling and social services.

What is a clinical social worker? 

100

This statistical method combines results from many studies to determine overall effectiveness.

What is a meta-analysis?

200
Using unconditional positive regard, this approach seeks to solve this underlying cause of current problems in the client.

What is humanistic? What is low self-efficacy or self-concept?

200

This therapy stems from principles developed by Thorndyke, Skinner, and Watson. 

What is behavior? 

200

This is generally considered to be a possible downside of using psychiatric medications.

What is dependency?

200

This professional can prescribe medication because they are a medical doctor. 

What is a psychiatrist?

200

This experimental method ensures neither the participant nor researcher knows who receives the treatment.

What is a double-blind procedure?

300

This approach focuses on changing maladaptive thoughts; there is an emphasis in understanding these, which have developed over time, and include examples such as all or nothing thinking, or discounting the positive.

What is cognitive? What are cognitive distortions?

300

This method pairs an unpleasant stimulus with an unwanted behavior to reduce it. This could be useful with those that struggle with alcoholism. 

What is aversive?

300

This mood stabilizer is commonly used to treat bipolar disorder.

What is lithium carbonate?

300

This type of therapy focuses on improving relationships and one's ability to navigate and function within these relationships.

What is interpersonal functioning?

300

Carl Rogers believed therapists should provide this environment for clients (3 parts). 

What is empathy, genuineness, and unconditional positive regard?

400

This type of clinician might use brain stimulation or SSRI's, utilizing this tx modality? (2 answers)

What is a psychiatrist? What is biomedical approach?
400

In behavior modification programs, this reinforcement system operates by issuing generalized reinforcers that can be exchanged later for a variety of privileges or items, and is grounded in principles of operant conditioning.

What is a generalized token economy system based on secondary reinforcers? (just token economy is accepted)

400

This treatment involves sending controlled electrical currents through the brain.

What is ECT (electroconvulsive therapy)?

400

This professional diagnoses and treats mental disorders but usually does not prescribe medication. In order to have this title, they must have obtained this degree. 

What is a psychologist? What is a doctoral degree? (PhD or PsyD)

400

Research suggests these three factors are shared by most successful therapists/therapies.


What are a therapeutic alliance, hope/expectancy, and common factors (empathy/support)?

500

These are the 5 general categories of mental health therapies.

What are psychoanalytic, humanistic, behavioral, cognitive, and biomedical?

500

This therapy uses bilateral stimulation to reduce trauma symptoms.

What is EMDR? (Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing)

500

This severe side effect of antipsychotic drugs causes involuntary movements.

What is tardive dyskinesia?

500

A client with severe major depressive disorder is seeking help. The treating clinician addresses the tx team and says they need to discuss the biopsychosocial factors for this client. What might be addressed during this clinical meeting? (provide 6 examples, 2 from each).

Could be any of the following: 

Genetics, previous medications, environmental factors, family, friends, school, job, spirituality, presenting symptoms (ex: self-harm, sleep patterns, food intake, etc.), previous experiences or traumas, core beliefs. 

500

These are the Tx recommendations for each for the following disorders. 

Bulimia Nervosa

Generalized Anxiety Disorder

Major Depressive Disorder

Specific Phobia 

What are: 

Bulimia--CBT with relapse prevention and cognitive strategies (will also accept DBT). 

Anxiety--CBT, Cognitive, Exposure (and anti-anxiety medication such as Xanax or Ativan)

Depression-- Behavior, Cognitive, and Interpersonal, also anti-depressants (SSRI's)

Phobias-- Behavior (systematic desensitization or exposure therapy)