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Psychosis: Counseling the Hallucinating or Delusional Patient Presented by Ron Broughton, M.Ed., L.P.C. Chief Clinical Officer Brookhaven Hospital Tulsa, Oklahoma

Psychosis: Counseling the Hallucinating or Delusional Patient Presented by Ron Broughton, M.Ed., L.P.C. Chief Clinical Officer Brookhaven Hospital Tulsa,

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Page 1: Psychosis: Counseling the Hallucinating or Delusional Patient Presented by Ron Broughton, M.Ed., L.P.C. Chief Clinical Officer Brookhaven Hospital Tulsa,

Psychosis:Counseling the Hallucinating or

Delusional Patient

Presented by Ron Broughton, M.Ed., L.P.C.Chief Clinical OfficerBrookhaven Hospital

Tulsa, Oklahoma

Page 2: Psychosis: Counseling the Hallucinating or Delusional Patient Presented by Ron Broughton, M.Ed., L.P.C. Chief Clinical Officer Brookhaven Hospital Tulsa,

ObjectivesObjectives

1.1. Overview of medications & efficacyOverview of medications & efficacy

2.2. Historical examination of the role of Historical examination of the role of psychotherapy with psychotic patientspsychotherapy with psychotic patients

3.3. Review recent research of CT/CBT Review recent research of CT/CBT

4.4. Learn specific therapy strategies for Learn specific therapy strategies for psychosispsychosis

5.5. Overview the of ABC modelOverview the of ABC model

Page 3: Psychosis: Counseling the Hallucinating or Delusional Patient Presented by Ron Broughton, M.Ed., L.P.C. Chief Clinical Officer Brookhaven Hospital Tulsa,

Definitions• Delusion: a false belief based on an incorrect inference

about external reality that is firmly sustained despite what almost everyone else believes, and despite what constitutes incontrovertible and obvious proof or evidence to the contrary.

• Hallucination: a sensory perception that has the compelling sense of reality of a true perception but that occurs without external stimulation of the relevant sensory organ

• Is it inside or outside? Interestingly, the DSM-IV “makes no distinction as to whether the source of the voices is perceived as being inside or outside of the head.”

Page 4: Psychosis: Counseling the Hallucinating or Delusional Patient Presented by Ron Broughton, M.Ed., L.P.C. Chief Clinical Officer Brookhaven Hospital Tulsa,

Charlie Brown’s View

Page 5: Psychosis: Counseling the Hallucinating or Delusional Patient Presented by Ron Broughton, M.Ed., L.P.C. Chief Clinical Officer Brookhaven Hospital Tulsa,
Page 6: Psychosis: Counseling the Hallucinating or Delusional Patient Presented by Ron Broughton, M.Ed., L.P.C. Chief Clinical Officer Brookhaven Hospital Tulsa,
Page 7: Psychosis: Counseling the Hallucinating or Delusional Patient Presented by Ron Broughton, M.Ed., L.P.C. Chief Clinical Officer Brookhaven Hospital Tulsa,

Research on Psychotherapy and Psychosis

Three Recent Eras

Page 8: Psychosis: Counseling the Hallucinating or Delusional Patient Presented by Ron Broughton, M.Ed., L.P.C. Chief Clinical Officer Brookhaven Hospital Tulsa,

Psychotherapy 1960-1975

Medicationvs.

Therapy

Medication SuperiorFocus

OnProblem Solving

Experienced Therapists

Better Outcomes*

Page 9: Psychosis: Counseling the Hallucinating or Delusional Patient Presented by Ron Broughton, M.Ed., L.P.C. Chief Clinical Officer Brookhaven Hospital Tulsa,

Psychotherapy 1980-1995

Page 10: Psychosis: Counseling the Hallucinating or Delusional Patient Presented by Ron Broughton, M.Ed., L.P.C. Chief Clinical Officer Brookhaven Hospital Tulsa,

The Early Theme

1. Psychodynamic approaches not effective

2. Strong therapeutic rapport

3. Personal therapy more effective

4. Experienced clinician + individualized approach = better outcome

Page 11: Psychosis: Counseling the Hallucinating or Delusional Patient Presented by Ron Broughton, M.Ed., L.P.C. Chief Clinical Officer Brookhaven Hospital Tulsa,

An Evolution Begins

Creativity is a drug I cannot live without.

--Cecil B. De Mille

Page 12: Psychosis: Counseling the Hallucinating or Delusional Patient Presented by Ron Broughton, M.Ed., L.P.C. Chief Clinical Officer Brookhaven Hospital Tulsa,

Evolvement in the Late 90’s

Page 13: Psychosis: Counseling the Hallucinating or Delusional Patient Presented by Ron Broughton, M.Ed., L.P.C. Chief Clinical Officer Brookhaven Hospital Tulsa,

The Late 90’s Results

Compared to supportive & psychoeducational treatment

Page 14: Psychosis: Counseling the Hallucinating or Delusional Patient Presented by Ron Broughton, M.Ed., L.P.C. Chief Clinical Officer Brookhaven Hospital Tulsa,

Don’t Forget Your Favorite College Course

Page 15: Psychosis: Counseling the Hallucinating or Delusional Patient Presented by Ron Broughton, M.Ed., L.P.C. Chief Clinical Officer Brookhaven Hospital Tulsa,
Page 16: Psychosis: Counseling the Hallucinating or Delusional Patient Presented by Ron Broughton, M.Ed., L.P.C. Chief Clinical Officer Brookhaven Hospital Tulsa,

CBT Research & Hallucinations

Reduces & decreases severity

Page 17: Psychosis: Counseling the Hallucinating or Delusional Patient Presented by Ron Broughton, M.Ed., L.P.C. Chief Clinical Officer Brookhaven Hospital Tulsa,

CBT Research & Hallucinations

Increases quality of life

Page 18: Psychosis: Counseling the Hallucinating or Delusional Patient Presented by Ron Broughton, M.Ed., L.P.C. Chief Clinical Officer Brookhaven Hospital Tulsa,

CBT Research & Hallucinations

CBT

MedicationCoping

Skills

Family Therapy

Integrative Approach

Page 19: Psychosis: Counseling the Hallucinating or Delusional Patient Presented by Ron Broughton, M.Ed., L.P.C. Chief Clinical Officer Brookhaven Hospital Tulsa,

CBT Research & Hallucinations

Overall, CBT

IMPACTS

Hallucinations

Page 20: Psychosis: Counseling the Hallucinating or Delusional Patient Presented by Ron Broughton, M.Ed., L.P.C. Chief Clinical Officer Brookhaven Hospital Tulsa,

CBT Research & Delusions

Studies Have Mixed Results

Page 21: Psychosis: Counseling the Hallucinating or Delusional Patient Presented by Ron Broughton, M.Ed., L.P.C. Chief Clinical Officer Brookhaven Hospital Tulsa,

CBT Research & Delusions

• Some no effect until follow-up• Early decrease, not @ follow-up• Others:

• 1/3 with decrease in conviction, preoccupation & anxiety

• 1/3 No change• 1/3 In between

Page 22: Psychosis: Counseling the Hallucinating or Delusional Patient Presented by Ron Broughton, M.Ed., L.P.C. Chief Clinical Officer Brookhaven Hospital Tulsa,

Client Satisfaction

Was treatment positive/helpful?

•CBT = 70% “Yes, definitely”•ST = 37%•TAU = 30%

Reason unclear, perhaps the therapeutic relationship?

Page 23: Psychosis: Counseling the Hallucinating or Delusional Patient Presented by Ron Broughton, M.Ed., L.P.C. Chief Clinical Officer Brookhaven Hospital Tulsa,

Strategies

Page 24: Psychosis: Counseling the Hallucinating or Delusional Patient Presented by Ron Broughton, M.Ed., L.P.C. Chief Clinical Officer Brookhaven Hospital Tulsa,

Strategies

Establish a strong therapeutic rapport

Page 25: Psychosis: Counseling the Hallucinating or Delusional Patient Presented by Ron Broughton, M.Ed., L.P.C. Chief Clinical Officer Brookhaven Hospital Tulsa,

Strategies

1. Stress reduction2. Relaxation techniques to stabilize3. Systematic desensitization to stabilize4. 5,4,3,2,1 to stabilize5. Normalize the experience6. Do Not use “delusion, hallucination,

psychosis”7. Know the belief well

Page 26: Psychosis: Counseling the Hallucinating or Delusional Patient Presented by Ron Broughton, M.Ed., L.P.C. Chief Clinical Officer Brookhaven Hospital Tulsa,

Strategies

8. Verbal challenge—the evidence9. Voice logs10. Client write out delusional content11. Evidence logs12. Change topic if client agitated13. Relapse prevention plan

Page 27: Psychosis: Counseling the Hallucinating or Delusional Patient Presented by Ron Broughton, M.Ed., L.P.C. Chief Clinical Officer Brookhaven Hospital Tulsa,

Therapist Role—Some Tips

1. Avoid waiting for the “meds to kick in”

2. Be reliable, predictable & dependable

3. Simple, honest accurate communication

4. Have a healthy curiosity—reflection & restatement of content

5. Walk in the delusion, don’t collude with it

6. Restrict use of silence, or watch the eyes

7. If agitated, go to a neutral topic

Page 28: Psychosis: Counseling the Hallucinating or Delusional Patient Presented by Ron Broughton, M.Ed., L.P.C. Chief Clinical Officer Brookhaven Hospital Tulsa,

The ABC Model for PsychosisThe Philosophy

Noumenon An object as it is in itself, independent of the mind.

Page 29: Psychosis: Counseling the Hallucinating or Delusional Patient Presented by Ron Broughton, M.Ed., L.P.C. Chief Clinical Officer Brookhaven Hospital Tulsa,

The Philosophy

Our reality is interpreted through our senses & beliefs,

The “B” of the ABC Model

Page 30: Psychosis: Counseling the Hallucinating or Delusional Patient Presented by Ron Broughton, M.Ed., L.P.C. Chief Clinical Officer Brookhaven Hospital Tulsa,

Delusions on a Continuum

Less Normal MoreAll of us fall on the continuum.

Page 31: Psychosis: Counseling the Hallucinating or Delusional Patient Presented by Ron Broughton, M.Ed., L.P.C. Chief Clinical Officer Brookhaven Hospital Tulsa,

5 Principles of the ABC Model

1. All clinical problems are C’s.

2. Problems arise from B’s not A’s.

3. There are predictable connections between B’s and C’s.

4. Core B’s arise from early experiences.

5. Weakening beliefs weakens associated distress & disturbance.

Page 32: Psychosis: Counseling the Hallucinating or Delusional Patient Presented by Ron Broughton, M.Ed., L.P.C. Chief Clinical Officer Brookhaven Hospital Tulsa,

Eight Basic Steps

1. Client defines a problem

2. Assess A or C

3. Assess the one that remains

4. Connect A to C & determine that is the clients primary worry

5. Assess beliefs, inferences & evaluations

Page 33: Psychosis: Counseling the Hallucinating or Delusional Patient Presented by Ron Broughton, M.Ed., L.P.C. Chief Clinical Officer Brookhaven Hospital Tulsa,

Eight Basic Steps

6. Formulation: Show the B-C connection Offer a developmental formulation

7. Set client’s goals & consider his options– Avoid or escape– Do nothing– They can change them in some way– Reduce by changing core beliefs

Page 34: Psychosis: Counseling the Hallucinating or Delusional Patient Presented by Ron Broughton, M.Ed., L.P.C. Chief Clinical Officer Brookhaven Hospital Tulsa,

Eight Basic Steps

8. Challenge beliefs Disputing and testing inferences Disputing and testing evaluations

Note: this is sequence of conceptual steps, not of technical ones. Lengthy & dynamic process.

Page 35: Psychosis: Counseling the Hallucinating or Delusional Patient Presented by Ron Broughton, M.Ed., L.P.C. Chief Clinical Officer Brookhaven Hospital Tulsa,

Case Study #1

1. Delusional set Excessive religiosity Minimal ADL’s Reading the Bible and prayer only

2. Interventions Assessed A’s Assessed C’s Assessed B’s (inferences, evaluation & interpretation) Challenged B’s Family therapy

Page 36: Psychosis: Counseling the Hallucinating or Delusional Patient Presented by Ron Broughton, M.Ed., L.P.C. Chief Clinical Officer Brookhaven Hospital Tulsa,

Case Study #2

1. Indeterminate delusional set Highly intelligent Mathematics wiz “Word salad”

2. Interventions Assessed A’s Assessed C’s Unable to assess B’s Focused on health & safety

Page 37: Psychosis: Counseling the Hallucinating or Delusional Patient Presented by Ron Broughton, M.Ed., L.P.C. Chief Clinical Officer Brookhaven Hospital Tulsa,

Review

1. Brief overview of medications & efficacy

2. Historical examination of the role of psychotherapy with psychotic patients

3. Review recent research of CT/CBT for psychosis

4. Learn specific therapy strategies for psychosis

5. Overview the ABC model

Page 38: Psychosis: Counseling the Hallucinating or Delusional Patient Presented by Ron Broughton, M.Ed., L.P.C. Chief Clinical Officer Brookhaven Hospital Tulsa,

Some Conclusions

1. Therapeutic work lengthy

2. Rapport is essential

3. Requires patience and empathy

4. DO NOT try to convince client

5. Use Socratic dialogue—client draws on his own experience & doubt

6. ABC model and schema therapy

Page 39: Psychosis: Counseling the Hallucinating or Delusional Patient Presented by Ron Broughton, M.Ed., L.P.C. Chief Clinical Officer Brookhaven Hospital Tulsa,

Questions?

Thank You!