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Social Sci LibreTexts

12: Treating Psychological Disorders

  • Page ID
    40805
    • Anonymous
    • LibreTexts

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    In this Chapter, we turn to consider the treatment of these disorders through psychotherapy and drug therapy.

    • 12.1: Reducing Disorder by Confronting It- Psychotherapy
      Treatment for psychological disorder begins when the individual who is experiencing distress visits a counselor or therapist, perhaps in a church, a community center, a hospital, or a private practice. The therapist will begin by systematically learning about the patient’s needs through a formal psychological assessment, which is an evaluation of the patient’s psychological and mental health.
    • 12.2: Reducing Disorder Biologically - Drug and Brain Therapy
      Like other medical problems, psychological disorders may in some cases be treated biologically. Biomedical therapies are treatments designed to reduce psychological disorder by influencing the action of the central nervous system. These therapies primarily involve the use of medications but also include direct methods of brain intervention, including electroconvulsive therapy (ECT), transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS), and psychosurgery.
    • 12.3: Evaluating Treatment and Prevention - What Works?
      We have seen that psychologists and other practitioners employ a variety of treatments in their attempts to reduce the negative outcomes of psychological disorders. But we have not yet considered the important question of whether these treatments are effective, and if they are, which approaches are most effective for which people and for which disorders. Accurate empirical answers to these questions are important.
    • 12.4: Reducing Disorder by Changing the Social Situation
      Although the individual therapies that we have discussed so far in this chapter focus primarily on the psychological and biological aspects of the bio-psycho-social model of disorder, the social dimension is never out of the picture. Therapists understand that disorder is caused, and potentially prevented, in large part by the people with whom we interact.
    • 12.S: Treating Psychological Disorders (Summary)


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