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Psychological Therapies for Schizophrenia

When people think of a psychologist, most would imagine a person sitting across from a patient in an armchair, with a notepad ready to dissect every word that comes out of a patient's mouth. While not as simplified as this, psychological therapies certainly offer therapies that are similar to the stereotype. Psychological therapies for schizophrenia focus primarily on three forms…

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Psychological Therapies for Schizophrenia

Psychological Therapies for Schizophrenia

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When people think of a psychologist, most would imagine a person sitting across from a patient in an armchair, with a notepad ready to dissect every word that comes out of a patient's mouth. While not as simplified as this, psychological therapies certainly offer therapies that are similar to the stereotype. Psychological therapies for schizophrenia focus primarily on three forms of therapy, in an attempt to help patients cope with the positive and negative symptoms of their disorder.

  • We will explore the various psychological therapies for schizophrenia.
  • First, we will outline and eventually evaluate psychological therapies for schizophrenia.
  • We will explore the three main types of therapy in schizophrenia: cognitive behavioural therapy, family therapy, and token economy systems, with particular attention paid to behaviour therapy for schizophrenia in psychology
  • Finally, we will assess the effectiveness of psychological therapies for schizophrenia, discussing their strengths and weaknesses.

Psychological Therapies for Schizophrenia, the back of two people visible facing a woman in a therapy session, VaiaFig. 1 - Psychological therapies are a form of treatment for schizophrenia.

Psychological Treatments for Schizophrenia

In the case of schizophrenia, there are three main psychological therapies we like to consider. Each therapy offers a

different avenue of treatment whilst aiming to address the disorder itself, purely from a psychological perspective.

Unlike the biological approach, most psychological therapies focus on addressing and altering the mind state by addressing a patient’s thought patterns and behaviours.

Different therapies use different techniques to treat the underlying cause of schizophrenia. Psychological therapies in schizophrenia address the symptoms as well as try to discern potential causes by exploring patients mind states, emotions, and personal backgrounds and situations. They tend to be much more person-centred approaches.

There are three main types of psychological therapies that we will cover:

  1. Cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT)
  2. Family Therapy
  3. Token Economy

Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT) for Schizophrenia: Cognitive Schizophrenia Treatment

Cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT) is one of the most used therapies out there currently. Curated by Aaron Beck in the 1960s, the main aim of CBT is to identify and then attempt to correct (or at least alter positively) dysfunctional thoughts. Dysfunctional thoughts in schizophrenia are the irrational beliefs schizophrenic patients have, and can manifest in a number of ways.

CBT, for instance, would work by addressing irrational beliefs and working through them logically, which works for positive symptoms such as hallucinations and delusions. Reality testing is a core part of CBT in the case of delusions and hallucinations.

Typically, CBT heeds the following format (Kingdon & Turkington, 2006):

Step 1: Assessment

Patients explain their situation to their therapist, identifying problematic thoughts and the potential causes for these thoughts. Reflection is a core aspect of the assessment stage, requiring the patient to truly think back on themselves and understand where their symptoms are coming from and what makes them better/worse. Rating scales are used to monitor progress.

Step 2: Engagement

Once the above issues have been identified, the therapist can set out a cognitive framework to address these issues and logically work through them (so, if a schizophrenic patient is having delusions of grandeur, a therapist would identify this with them and logically work through it to show it is a delusion). Socratic questioning is employed, alongside a vulnerability-stress model. Empathy is heavily emphasized between patient and therapist.

The ABC Model of CBT

CBT adopts the ABC model, established by Ellis and Harper (1961). The ABC model attempts to cognitively restructure a schizophrenic patient's thought patterns through identifying activating events, behaviours and beliefs, and any subsequent consequences.

  • (A) - Activating event: what is the cause?
  • (B) - Behaviour and beliefs: how is the patient reacting?
  • (C) - Consequences: what are the consequences of these reactions? How do we recognise the consequences?

CBT then works on disputing these irrational beliefs through reality testing, normalisation, and critical analysis. Overall, CBT usually lasts anywhere from 12 to 20 sessions and aims to help reduce the uncomfortable symptoms of schizophrenia.

Psychological Therapies for Schizophrenia, a man holding his face in his hands distressed sitting opposite another person in a therapy session, VaiaFig. 2 - CBT is a psychological therapy used to treat mental health disorders, including schizophrenia.

Family Therapy for Schizophrenia

Family therapy focuses on the people around the patient, involving them in the treatment process. Research has shown that many relapses in schizophrenia tend to occur after a patient has returned to their family environment. There are multiple reasons why this is the case.

Relapse, according to research, is typically due to expressed emotions (EE), stress, guilt, and an overall lack of education or ignorance about the disorder where family environments are concerned.

Families are not perfectly attuned to every possible mental health disorder out there, so until it directly affects them, no one will truly know about these issues (and even then, it requires a lot of time, patience, and effort to understand mental health). Family members, especially the main support provider, often report feeling guilty and shameful. It is important, then, that therapy provides help to all those affected.

Family therapy usually involves an interview process, observation of the family, and then frank discussions about the situation and disorder.

The goal of family therapy is to provide or offer (Caqueo-Urízar et al., 2015):

  • Psychoeducational.
  • Opportunities for stress reduction.
  • Avenues for emotional processing.
  • Cognitive reappraisal.
  • Structured problem-solving solutions to improve situations inside and outside of the home.

Token Economy Systems for Schizophrenia

In schizophrenic patients, token economies focus on maladaptive behaviours that prevent a patient from adapting to new situations, treating both positive and negative symptoms of schizophrenia. Although this treatment method has fallen out of fashion (with the fall in institutionalisation), it does employ some well-established psychological theories.

Token economies (TES), developed in the 1960s, involve a behavioural-based reward system that encourages 'good behaviours' and discourages 'bad behaviours'. It is based on the concept of operant conditioning.

TES usually involves the following process:

  • TES is introduced as soon as a patient enters the setting: rewards and good behaviours are established.
  • They use physical tokens or tally systems: they can be earned and easily understood/quantified by introducing physical tokens or tally systems. These are the secondary reinforcers.
  • They then trade these tokens in: Rewards can be given based on how many tokens a person has earned with good behaviour (such as bathing, getting up on time, socialising and addressing symptoms through treatment etc.). These are the primary reinforcers.

Overall, primary reinforcers give power to the secondary reinforcers.

Schizophrenic patients may be given a token for getting out of bed and showering. With enough tokens, they can then trade this in for a reward, such as a new book or a day out. Rewards are tailored towards patients' likes and dislikes.

TES is catered specifically to the patient (so their wants and needs can be directly addressed and influence their behaviour).

Psychological Therapies for Schizophrenia, four increasing stacks of coins and a jar of coins with a plant growing out of each, VaiaFig. 3 - Tokens can be exchanged for rewards.

Assess the Effectiveness of Psychological Therapies for Schizophrenia

As with all treatment plans, psychological therapies have their strengths and weaknesses. Let's assess the effectiveness of psychological therapies for schizophrenia. The following can be considered strong points of psychological therapies:

Strengths

Let's explore the strengths of psychological therapies for schizophrenia.

  • Concerning CBT, Kuipers et al. (1997) investigated the effects CBT had on psychosis (as it had positive effects on those with depression). 60 participants with at least one positive symptom (who also had issues with medication) were randomly allocated to either a CBT and standard care condition (n = 28), or a control group with standard care only condition (n = 32).Over nine months, they found significant improvement for those receiving treatment compared to standard care only. There was a low dropout rate and high satisfaction, and CBT had a 50% treatment response compared to 31% of the control group. They concluded that CBT for psychosis could improve symptoms.
  • Concerning family therapy, Pharoah et al. (2010) found that from data (randomised and quasi-randomised) on families with members affected by schizophrenia, family therapy reduces the rate of relapsing in those with schizophrenia, including the rate of hospitalisation.
  • Concerning token economies, McMonagle and Sultana (2000) found that, when comparing a token economy system to standard care, it has an effect on the negative symptoms of schizophrenia, although had little to no effect on other areas. They did, however, state that whether this is reproducible and long-term is up for debate and requires more research.

Weaknesses

Let's explore the weaknesses of psychological therapies for schizophrenia.

  • CBT is mostly used alongside drug therapy for schizophrenia in psychology, suggesting that it is not a cure-all, robust therapy. It needs help, and implying CBT is enough alone is ignoring the biological basis of schizophrenia. It also has been shown to have a short-term effectiveness rate, as when studies analysed the rate of relapse compared to standard care, CBT had a similar or the same rate of relapse. CBT also relies on self-reports from patients, which is not the most reliable method of data collection, especially considering a schizophrenic patient's history with hallucinations and delusions.
  • Family therapy, similar to CBT, does not address the biological aspect of the disorder, and instead focuses mostly on the nurture side of the debate. Blame can be placed on the family environment, which may incite more feelings of guilt and stress.
  • Token economies have ethical issues, as they are essentially withholding freedoms from patients and demanding they are earned back purely through a reward system. Is it ethically acceptable to restrict this right from patients? They also lack ecological validity and struggle to provide consistent, long-term results outside of clinical environments. As well as this, it is only applicable to those willing to work for their rewards. If a patient doesn't want to or is too ill to engage in the behaviours, token economies would be useless or even cruel to them.

Psychological Therapies for Schizophrenia - Key takeaways

  • Where schizophrenia is concerned, there are three main psychological therapies: cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT), family therapy, and token economies.
  • CBT involves addressing dysfunctional thoughts and symptoms and working through these issues logically, implementing new thought processes. It usually follows the ABC model developed by Ellis and Harper (1961).
  • Family therapy involves incorporating the immediate members of a patient's everyday life (usually close family members) into the treatment plan, focusing on educating them and aiding the patient's recovery.
  • Token economies focus on rewarding good behaviours and reinforcing them, based on operant conditioning.
  • Each form of therapy has its own strengths and weaknesses and can be used alongside biological treatments to aid schizophrenic patients.

Frequently Asked Questions about Psychological Therapies for Schizophrenia

This is up for debate, as both biological and psychological therapies have their strengths and weaknesses, so we cannot conclusively say one is perfect for schizophrenia. However, cognitive behavioural therapy combined with drug therapy has shown promising results.

Psychological therapies help schizophrenia by addressing dysfunctional thoughts and helping a patient logically work through them, which is also transferrable to everyday life (it can be practised outside of a therapy session). It also allows patients to reflect on their behaviours and potentially address their social circle and family life. 

In terms of the psychological factors of schizophrenia, this could be referring to the imbalance in dopamine and serotonin (the neurotransmitters affecting the person's brain with the disorder). Ultimately, this results in positive symptoms (hallucinations, delusions of grandeur) and negative symptoms (alogia, depression, lack of motivation). 

Interventions can come in the form of family therapy, group therapy, cognitive behavioural therapy, and general counselling sessions. 

Yes, primarily when used in combination with drug therapies. Although, whether it has long-term effects is still up for debate.

Final Psychological Therapies for Schizophrenia Quiz

Psychological Therapies for Schizophrenia Quiz - Teste dein Wissen

Question

What is cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT)?

Show answer

Answer

Cognitive behavioural therapy is a psychological talking therapy that explores dysfunctional, maladaptive thoughts and behaviours and employs behavioural learning techniques to combat these issues, usually through analysing cognition and behaviour logically and restructuring these thought processes.

Show question

Question

How long does CBT usually take?

Show answer

Answer

Around 6 to 12 weeks depending on the patient’s needs.

Show question

Question

What are the stages of CBT?

Show answer

Answer

Assessment and engagement.

Show question

Question

True or False: A clinician may use the ABC model when providing cognitive behavioural therapy.

Show answer

Answer

True.

Show question

Question

Who established the ABC model?

Show answer

Answer

Ellis and Harper (1961)

Show question

Question

What is the ABC model in cognitive behavioural therapy?

Show answer

Answer

  • Activating event: what is causing the problem? Patients often give their own estimation of what they think activating events are.

  • Behaviour and beliefs: how does the patient react in these situations? The patient's own beliefs are linked intrinsically to the activating and events and consequences, bridging the missing gaps in the patient's knowledge of their behaviours.

  • Consequences: what impact does this have on the patient’s life and their relationships with others? What are the emotional and behavioural consequences?


Show question

Question

What did Rathod et al. (2010) find in their study?

Show answer

Answer

Rathod et al. (2010) found that, when combined with antipsychotic medication, CBT acted as an effective facilitator to the treatment of symptoms of schizophrenia

Show question

Question

When something is being masked in a study, what does that entail?

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Answer

If something is being masked, it means it is being kept hidden from the individual being studied and/or the investigators to avoid potential bias occurring.

Show question

Question

What did Kingdon and Kirschen (2006) find in their study? 


Show answer

Answer

They found that CBT is not appropriate for every patient with schizophrenia. It depends on the individual and how they respond to treatment, and how severe their symptoms are.

Show question

Question

What is the average length of family therapy?

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Answer

Usually, family therapy lasts for nine months up to a year.

Show question

Question

What are the processes of family therapy?

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Answer

Family therapy is similar to cognitive behavioural therapy. It takes around nine months to a year, and involves informed consent. Therapists interview and question patients and family members first. 


The therapist then encourages patients and their families to learn about the facts and causes of the disease, including the impact of medications and how issues such as added stress and unwarranted guilt can affect the patient AND the caregiver/family.


Training is then provided to help patients and family members cope with the disorder at home.

Show question

Question

True or False: Patients and caregivers agree to an open-natured approach to therapy, and focus is placed heavily on informed consent, as issues can crop up when boundaries on information sharing are crossed. 

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Answer

True.

Show question

Question

True or False: During the first stage of family therapy, a therapist interviews and observes families and households to determine the family’s problem areas and strengths.  

Show answer

Answer

True.

Show question

Question

What is psychoeducation in family therapy?

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Answer

It is the process of educating the family involved about the disorder and the effects of outside influences on it.

Show question

Question

What is the strength of family therapy?

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Answer

It reduces levels of relapse rates in patients with schizophrenia.

Show question

Question

What is a weakness of family therapy?

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Answer

It is a lengthy process, and families can drop out due to the severity of symptoms or unresolved conflicts.

Show question

Question

What did Leff (1985) find?

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Answer

In patients with schizophrenia, those with standard outpatient care had a relapse rate of 50% within nine months. However, those who had family therapy had a relapse rate of only 8% within nine months. After two years, 50% of patients with family therapy relapsed, and 75% without family therapy.

Show question

Question

What do the results of Leff (1985) suggest?

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Answer

Family therapy is an effective treatment when reducing rates of relapse. However, it may only be a short-term solution.

Show question

Question

What did Claxton et al. (2017) find in their study?

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Answer

When looking at family therapies reduction effect on relapse rates, after around six months, this effect reduces dramatically, and evidence of improvement was not sustained past six months.

Show question

Question

What did Lobban (2013) find?

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Answer

Lobban (2013) found that family members felt they were coping better thanks to family therapy. Thus, family therapy reduces the pressures and resulting negative systems that develop due to poor support systems at home.

Show question

Question

What three categories did Matson et al. (2016) establish of institutional behaviour affected by token economies?

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Answer

Personal care, condition related behaviour, and social behaviour.

Show question

Question

 What did Allyon and Azrin (1968) find in their study?

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Answer

Patients have to want to do certain behaviours for TES to be applicable.

Show question

Question

Give an example of a negative symptom of schizophrenia that TES affects.

Show answer

Answer

Avolition.

Show question

Question

Describe the Glowacki et al. (2016) study.

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Answer

Glowacki et al. (2016), in a meta-analysis of seven high-quality studies of the effectiveness of TES in hospitals, found that all studies showed decreased negative symptoms and a decrease in the frequency of undesirable behaviours (violence and aggression).

Show question

Question

What did Kazdin (1982) say about TES? 

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Answer

Kazdin (1982) found that changes that were developed during a patient’s time in hospital using TES did not remain once they were discharged. Although TES is a way to alleviate symptoms, it is not a cure. 

Show question

Question

What are the three forms of psychological therapies available for schizophrenia?

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Answer

  • Family Therapy
  • Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT)
  • Token Economy Systems

Show question

Question

Aaron ___ curated cognitive behavioural therapy in the 1960s. 

Show answer

Answer

Beck.

Show question

Question

What thoughts does cognitive behavioural therapy aim to address?

Show answer

Answer

Dysfunctional Thoughts. 

Show question

Question

True or False: Reality testing is a core part of CBT in the case of delusions and hallucinations.


Show answer

Answer

True.

Show question

Question

Cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT) involves ________ and _________.

Show answer

Answer

Assessment, Engagement. 

Show question

Question

The ABC model was established by _____.

Show answer

Answer

Ellis and Harper (1961).

Show question

Question

What is the ABC model in cognitive behavioural therapy?

Show answer

Answer

  • (A) - Activating event: what is the cause?
  • (B) - Behaviour and beliefs: how is the patient reacting?
  • (C) - Consequences: what are the consequences of these reactions? How do we recognise the consequences?


Show question

Question

What are the goals of family therapy?

Show answer

Answer

The goal of family therapy is to provide or offer (Caqueo-Urízar et al., 2015):


  • Psychoeducational.
  • Opportunities for stress reduction.
  • Avenues for emotional processing.
  • Cognitive reappraisal.
  • Structured problem-solving solutions to improve situations inside and outside of the home.


Show question

Question

True or False: Family therapy usually involves an interview process, observation of the family, and then frank discussions about the situation and disorder. 

Show answer

Answer

True.

Show question

Question

True or False: In token economy systems, primary reinforcers give power to the secondary reinforcers. 

Show answer

Answer

True. 

Show question

Question

What did Kuipers et al. (1997) find in their study?

Show answer

Answer

Over nine months, they found significant improvement for those receiving treatment compared to standard care only. There was a low dropout rate and high satisfaction, and CBT had a 50% treatment response compared to 31% of the control group. They concluded that CBT for psychosis could improve symptoms. 


Show question

Question

What did McMonagle and Sultana (2000) find in their study?

Show answer

Answer

They found that, when comparing a token economy system to standard care, it has an effect on the negative symptoms of schizophrenia, although had little to no effect on other areas. They did, however, state that whether this is reproducible and long-term is up for debate and requires more research. 

Show question

Question

True or False: CBT relies on self-reports from patients, which is not the most reliable method of data collection, especially considering a schizophrenic patient's history with hallucinations and delusions.  


Show answer

Answer

True.

Show question

Question

Can blaming family members for increased relapse rates in schizophrenic patients cause feelings of shame and guilt?

Show answer

Answer

Yes. Blame can be placed on the family environment, which may incite more feelings of guilt and stress 

Show question

Question

True or False: Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT) can only be used for schizophrenia.

Show answer

Answer

False.

Show question

Question

What other disorders can cognitive behavioural therapy treat besides schizophrenia?

Show answer

Answer

Examples of disorders that use cognitive behavioural therapy include:



 

Show question

Question

Explain the engagement phase in cognitive behavioural therapy for schizophrenia.

Show answer

Answer

Engagement: Socratic questioning (a way of engaging in dialogue that is logical, thoughtful, disciplined, and controlled) is encouraged, and the therapy is discussed with the patient to establish the intentions going forwards. Therapists use a vulnerability-stress model, aiding the understanding of the process and how it integrates daily life and the disorder. Empathy is heavily emphasized, and the goal is to help the patient understand the situation and establish coping mechanisms.


Show question

Question

What is Socratic questioning in the context of cognitive behavioural therapy?

Show answer

Answer

Socratic questioning is a way of engaging in dialogue that is logical, thoughtful, disciplined and controlled in therapy situations. 

Show question

Question

True or False: Therapists use a vulnerability-stress model, aiding the understanding of the process and how it integrates daily life and the disorder.  

Show answer

Answer

True.

Show question

Question

True or False: Socratic questioning is used to move patients through the ABC model, using various scales to monitor the progress of the therapy (such as using a scale of 0 to 10).  

Show answer

Answer

True.

Show question

Question

True or False: When disputing the beliefs of a schizophrenic patient, it can be done through goal setting, reality testing, normalisation, critical collaborative analysis and the development of alternative explanations.

Show answer

Answer

True. 

Show question

Question

What is reality testing?

Show answer

Answer

Reality testing helps a patient identify irrational or illogical events. If patients struggle to differentiate between their internal reality (such as hearing voices and hallucinating), and external reality (what is actually occurring), they may engage in beliefs and behaviours that do not reflect reality and hurt themselves and others around them.


Reality testing is where a patient is encouraged to evaluate and recognise that their irrational thoughts are not real. 


Show question

Question

What is critical collaborative analysis?

Show answer

Answer

Critical collaborative analysis bridges conversations between patient and therapist so they can explore illogical beliefs together, and identify logical conclusions.


A clinician and patient should work together, logically discussing ideas that the patient has, why they are wrong, and why they came about.


Show question

Question

What did Gould et al. (2001) find in their meta-analysis?

Show answer

Answer

Gould et al. (2001) conducted a meta-analysis investigating cognitive therapy for psychosis in schizophrenia. Over 340 subjects, they found a mean effect size of 0.65 for reducing positive symptoms in schizophrenia, supporting the use of CBT in treating psychotic symptoms of schizophrenia.

Show question

Question

What did Sensky et al. (2000) find in their study?

Show answer

Answer

They found that CBT is effective in treating both positive and negative symptoms in schizophrenic patients, and this result was sustained when they followed up with patients nine months later, supporting the use of CBT in treating schizophrenia and demonstrating its efficacy.

Show question

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