Day :
- Workshop
Location: Bordeaux
Session Introduction
Gisele Fernandes
California Institute of Integral Studies, USA
Title: Care for the caregiver: An integral approach to sustaining wellness and preventing compassion fatigue
Biography:
Gisele Fernandes is a licensed psychotherapist, clinical supervisor, organizational consultant, and graduate school professor. She has extensive training and clinical experience in body-oriented approaches to psychotherapy, using an integrative method that is rooted in somatic, humanistic-existential and transpersonal psychologies. Originally from Brazil, she began her career as a counselor in a hospital setting in Rio de Janeiro. From the beginning, she was interested in the body-mind connection and in holistic ways of understanding and treating the complexities of the mind-body system, both from the patient as well as the provider’s perspective. Since 2001, she has been working in the bay area in community mental health and private practice settings. Her therapeutic work integrates sensorimotor trauma approach, attachment-based psychotherapy, and mindfulness. She is a core faculty member at the California Institute of Integral Studies and has been teaching in academic settings since 2008.
Abstract:
Caring for others is a gift. Most people in the health and healing field find a deep sense of meaning in their work and consider it a vocation, a personal and purposeful path. At the same time, giving, caring and healing can take its toll: burnout and compassion fatigue are genuine dangers that can derail or shortcut practitioners’ careers. Whether you are a nurse or another care provider, being with the pain and suffering of others cannot only be draining at times but lead to a general sense of overwhelming, disenchantment and exhaustion. This presentation presents a model of holistic and integral intervention in preventing compassion fatigue in health care providers working in the clinic and hospital settings. The integral approach presented here originated out of a need to support psychological, physical and spiritual health and well-being in individuals and groups who are vulnerable to secondary traumatization and chronic stress in the workplace. It involves the use of yoga, guided imagery, breathing techniques, as well as discussions and psycho-education about compassion fatigue and effective self-care. The presentation addresses the use of cognitive and experiential practices to support healthcare providers in better-utilizing self-awareness and boundaries to prevent compassion fatigue.
- ExhibitorSession
Location: Bordeaux
Session Introduction
Vicente Robinson
Neurocrine Biosciences, USA
Title: Ingrezza capsules:Prescription medicine used to treat adults with movements in the face, tongue, or other body parts that cannot be controlled
Biography:
Abstract:
- Psychiatric and Mental Health Nursing | Positive Psychology and Wellbeing | Psychiatry and Psychology | Psychological Disorders/Psychiatric Syndromes
Location: Bordeaux
Chair
Elia Gourgouris
The Happiness Center, USA
Co-Chair
Ben Thomas
London South Bank University, UK
Session Introduction
David P. Graham
Baylor College of Medicine, USA
Title: A synthesis of 5 years of research on the influences of PTSD and TBI on community reintegration in OEF/OIF veterans
Biography:
David P Graham is a native Houstonian who received a BS in Biology from Notre Dame, an MS in Zoology from Texas A&M (having studied the feeding behaviors of American Alligators as part of my field herpetology degree), before returning to Baylor College of Medicine to attend medical school. He completed his residency in Psychiatry at the University of New Mexico, and a Health Services research fellowship at the MEDVAMC as part of the MIRECC program. He worked in the Mental Health Care Line as a staff psychiatrist. He is an avid researcher, and his focus being on the overlap of traumatic brain injury and PTSD on community reintegration. As an Associate Professor at Baylor College of Medicine, he taught several courses to the 1st and 2nd year Psychiatry residents and mentor 3rd and 4th-year residents both in research and clinical services.
Abstract:
Statement of the Problem: Community reintegration (CR) describes the process of an individual’s adjustment and return to participation in their major social roles at home, work, and in the community. Estimates suggest of the 2.3 million Operation Enduring Freedom (OEF) and Operation Iraqi Freedom (OIF) US service members deployed, over 300,000 have mild TBI and at least 300,000 have PTSD. Negative consequences for CR in Veterans associated with mild TBI have included increased rates of apathy, depression, anger, and disinhibition, and increased risk of being victims of violence and abuse. The negative consequences for CR associated with PTSD have included decreased quality of life, increased self-reported medical and physical symptoms, increased substance use, and suicide. PTSD also has negative economic and interpersonal consequences for Veterans including decreased work performance, increased homelessness, and impaired family relationships.
Methodology & Theoretical Orientation: This talk will be based on a synthesis of the presenter’s work completed over the past five years and will highlight associations and points of clinical relevance among TBI, PTSD, and CR.
Findings: Mild TBI and PTSD are indirectly associated with CR ratings through increases of depression symptoms. These associations are moderated by an individual’s genetics and Ventral Striatum integrity.
Conclusion & Significance: Clinical providers struggle with assisting Veterans in their attempts to successfully reintegrate into their civilian lives. Recommendations will be made how to use the information to better assist Veterans with CR efforts.
Paul Maloret
University of Hertfordshire, UK
Title: The lived experience of mental health inpatients with an autistic spectrum condition: A phenomenological study
Biography:
Paul Maloret has worked as a nurse in mental health and intellectual disability inpatient facilities for many years before joining the University of Hertfordshire where he is now the Head of the Centre of Learning Disability Studies and a Principal Lecturer in Learning Disability Nursing. This study is part of a Doctoral programme in Health Research.
Abstract:
This qualitative study explored how mental health inpatients with autistic spectrum conditions experience and cope with anxiety when admitted to an acute mental health inpatient facility in the UK. Anxiety is a common characteristic for people who live with autistic spectrum conditions and whilst studies on anxiety in this population are common place and case studies correlate anxiety with mental health service experience, little is known about the actual triggers of anxiety and its manifestations. Despite growing acknowledgment that admission to acute mental health facilities should be a last resort, reported figures on admissions in the UK to continue to rise. During 2016-2018 audio-recorded semi-structured interviews captured the experiences of 20 adults from the East of England who was former psychiatric inpatients with an established diagnosis of autistic spectrum condition. Interpretative phenomenological data analysis enabled the identification of broad themes which explained in rich detail, participant reflections regarding the situations and events within the acute care mental health facility that triggered their anxiety, behavioral manifestations of anxiety and, responses to their anxiety. It was then possible to establish the broad behavioral patterns that could be associated with their anxiety i.e. isolating themselves from others, including patients and staff, ceasing to eat and sleep adequately and all too often self-harming or exhibiting aggressive and violent behaviors. The anxiety caused by the physical environment appears to be overlooked by mental health practitioners so attention to anxiety-inducing encounters is needed when planning acute care mental health service improvement and research is required to clearly understand the experiences of this group of vulnerable people.
Biography:
Grashika Devendra was born in the beautiful island of Fiji where she finished primary school. She moved to the United States and further finished high school and graduated with Associate Degree Nursing from Modesto, California and got her Bachelor’s Degree from California State University, Stanislaus. She graduated from nursing school and got licensed and started her career in Psych Nursing. At first, she was scared and unsure of my career in Psych Nursing, but as the days went by, she became sure, and her path became clearer. She gained her experience at inpatient and outpatient psychiatric facilities and then went into Correctional Psych Nursing. She wanted to further her career in the psychiatric field and gaining her Doctor of Nursing Practice, Psychiatric Mental Health Nurse Practitioner was the best option and career for her. Innovation in Psychiatry is her goal and passion.
Abstract:
The needs of patients with mental health disorders are being questioned in correctional facilities. According to Mental Health America (2016), between 300,000 and 400,000 people with mental illness are incarcerated in the jails and prisons in the United States. The importance of early detection of mental illnesses is crucial in the correctional setting to decrease mental health crises, for example, suicides and other psychotic episodes. The nursing staff working in the correctional setting need to be educated, trained and introduced to this population. A Mental Health screening tool must be utilized to help identify these inmates early on. This project was conducted to improve the number of mental health referrals by nursing staff in a corrections system of care, over three months period in a jail in California. The medical nurses, who did admissions or intakes, at the correctional facility were selected. The participants were trained to use the Correctional Mental Health Screening tool for Men (CMHS-M) at intake. The correctional mental health tool for men (CMHS-M), is a tool designed for the purpose of early detection of mental illness in the correctional setting. This tool helps assist in the early identification of mental illness so that appropriate interventions are made accordingly. Screening is important because it can distinguish if a patient/inmate is suffering from a mental illness, substance abuse problems, development delays or intellectual difficulties, or other deficits in their cognitive functioning. This tool showed evidence of reliability, validity, and predictive utility in relation to the accurate identification of undetected mental illnesses (Gonzales, Schofield, Hagy & US Department of Justice Office of Justice Programs National Institute of Justice (NIJ), 2007). A paired samples t-test was used to gather pre-and post-data results. The overall results helped increase the mental health patient referrals by nursing staff through early detection of mental illnesses. The aim of this project was to utilize the CMHS-M tool with an adult male population in the correctional setting to determine whether this tool should be used as a screening instrument for the identification of mental health problems on a permanent basis. This project showed that the CMHS-M tool does screen for mental illness among male inmates resulting in increased referrals for mental health care. It is a guide for medical nurses to refer patients to the providers, which leads to early treatment and prevention of mental illness.
Jennifer L Fee
Vanguard University, USA
Title: From anxious to empowered: How the messenger of anxiety can be used to help people move toward healing and purpose
Biography:
Jennifer Fee is a Psychologist with over 25 years of training and experience helping people with anxiety, panic, and trauma recovery. As an EMDRIA approved Consultant, she helps other professionals gain certification in Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing Therapy (EMDR). She maintains a full-time private practice and works as a half-time Assistant Professor in the Graduate Psychology Program at Vanguard University in Costa Mesa, California. As an International speaker, she aims to break the stigma surrounding mental health disorders, educate the public regarding trauma and its treatment, and inspire hope among those who are suffering.
Abstract:
The World Health Organization (WHO) estimates that approximately 264 million people worldwide meet criteria for an anxiety disorder, with nearly twice as many women afflicted than men. In the USA, anxiety disorders are the most common, with 18.1% of the population meeting criteria each year. While a great deal of anxiety treatment focusses on symptom management and reduction, there’s one particular piece to the problem of anxiety that is often misunderstood and overlooked. For some, underlying a lot of anxiety issues is an unrecognized and unresolved experience of trauma somewhere in the sufferer’s history. Unresolved trauma is a problem that can impact the sufferers emotional, relational, and occupational functioning. Anxiety is a messenger that tries to point the sufferer to the deeper issue that needs to be addressed. While many assume that significant or “Big T” traumas cause one to be “damaged for life” or take many years of therapy to resolve, this belief is not always reality. Additionally, other events, known as “little t” traumas are often not even recognized as having a significant effect on one’s mental health. Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing Therapy (EMDR) is one highly effective therapy for addressing both “Big T” and “Little t” traumas. EMDR helps people to heal from paralyzing anxiety and trauma issues by using the brain’s own capacity to process and move towards better mental health and functioning. Nearly 50 studies utilizing EMDR demonstrate positive treatment outcomes. However, many barriers keep people from obtaining treatment, including fear, stigma, and access to services. There is much work to be done in terms of providing education regarding anxiety, trauma, and treatment as well as encouragement and empowerment for those who are suffering from these issues to aid them to seek the treatment that they need.
- Psychiatry and Psychology | Mental Health and Psychiatric Nursing
Location: Bordeaux
Session Introduction
Souzan Abd El-Menem Abd El-Ghafar Harfush
Tanta University, Egypt
Title: Resilience, caregiving burden, and quality of life in Egyptian family caregivers of patients with schizophrenia
Biography:
Abstract:
Fouad Ktiri
Institute of Nursing Professions and Health Techniques, Morocco
Title: Equipoise: New dimensions of stress and its numerical modeling
Biography:
Ktiri Fouad is a Clinical Psychologist, a Psychology Teacher, a Researcher, and a Yoga coach. His experiences in Clinical Psychology and Yoga-relaxation allowed him to publish, in 2015, a paper book entitled "Stress - How to prevent and fight it-New psychological, spiritual, body and cognitive techniques". From 2009, he has animated conferences and participated in many radio psychological programs. His experiences as a physics and computer graduate helped him to combine psychology and mathematics, which allowed him to elaborate a new stress numerical model and published it in 2016. Now, he is continuing to do researches in psychology, and write articles weekly in Moroccan newspapers.
Abstract:
In the present study, we introduce a new stress approach, which completes the transactional theory of Folkman and Lazarus (1984). It is a numerical model in which we take into account another variable named PSS (Previous State of Stress) that we estimate necessary to explain why the psychological state of stress occurs or not. In our model, stress is presented in the form of a mathematical function (equation) of three variables (PSS, SV, R). By evaluating each of these components, this equation enables us to evaluate the generated stress intensity of a person. By improving this formula, the present model enables us to take into account another type of stimulus (positive stimulus) and to evaluate it. Many instances of daily stress, that take into account these new dimensions, have been cited. The stress formula efficiency has been tested by applying it to these examples and to some concepts like violence and stress accumulation. RQSI (Required Quantity of Stress Index) is an index that we have introduced in our numerical model. The calculated RQSI enables us to evaluate the average amount of stress (positive or negative) that a person receives from each stimulus he has been exposed to during a period of time. A new definition of stress phenomena, on the basis of our new numerical data model, is proposed.
Karem H Alzoubi,
Jordan University of Science and Technology, Jordan
Title: Protection of disease/conditions induced memory impairment by novel pharmaceutical agents
Biography:
Karem H Alzoubi is a productive Scientist. He has published over 200 publications in distinguished international, scientific, peer-reviewed, indexed and refereed journals or international conferences. Additionally, most of the scientific production of his is in journals with high impact factor relative to its area of specialization as per the ISI Web Knowledge and Scopus databases. He has an H-index of 30 (Scopus, 2018). He has obtained his PhD degree in pharmacology from the College of Pharmacy at the University of Houston, Texas, USA. He is now the Dean of the Faculty of Pharmacy at Jordan University of Science and Technology. He has been awarded several national and international research and education excellence prizes. He had his pre-doctoral research in pharmacology, where he was trained on state of the art techniques in behavioral and molecular neuroscience/neuropharmacology of cognitive functions. He has PI-ed or Co-PI-ed over 80 research grants with success and published from every one of them.
Abstract:
Memory impairment or dementia can be devastating and can lead to several complications. It can be precipitated as a result of various diseases or conditions including Alzheimer’s disease, hypothyroidism, post-traumatic stress disorder, vascular dementia, chronic stress, obesity, aging, sleep deprivation, and consumption of high-fat high-carbohydrates diet, whereas it can possibly be treated, various agents. The long-term goal of my studies is to explore novel pharmaceutical agents and interventions that prevent or restores memory impairment induced by various diseases or conditions. In this presentation, I will be discussing my latest results in a group of drugs including nicotine, L-thyroxin, pentoxifylline (PTX), caffeine, vitamin E, and C, tempol, etazolate, etc. These agents showed protective properties against memory impairment induced by chronic stress, hypothyroidism, sleep deprivation, Alzheimer’s disease, post-traumatic stress disorder, and obesity-induced by consumption high-fat high-carbohydrates diet. Results presented are based on pre-clinical studies using standard or innovative animal models of the above diseases or conditions superimposed with chronic drug treatment. Thereafter, behavioral studies were conducted to test the spatial learning and memory using the Radial Arm Water Maze. Additionally, brain regions were usually dissected; and levels/activities of important signaling molecules or biomarkers related to oxidative stress and inflammation will be presented as possible molecular targets for the tested medications. Collectively, presented results will show the possibility of treating or preventing cognitive impairment in various diseases and conditions via the chronic use of novel pharmaceutical agents, which is probably achieved through normalizing the levels or activities of important signaling and biological biomarkers within the hippocampus.
- Special Session
Location: Bordeaux
Session Introduction
Lorinda Brink Bergh
Medipark Medical Centre, South Africa
Title: Experience of my own developmental process while working in the field of psychology over a period of more than 30 years
Time : 17:15-18:00
Biography:
Lorinda Bergh completed her Master’s Degree in 1974 and her PhD in Psychology in 2002 at the University of Pretoria in South Africa. She worked for more than 30 years in the Department of Correctional Services and retired as a Brigadier (Senior Manager) in 2009. Assisted in the compilation of the Uniform National Guidelines for Sexual Assault Offenders, presented papers nationally and internationally and published in the Russian Journal of Psychiatry, wrote chapters for a book that addresses “Violence in South Africa” and the other for “International Perspectives on Sex Offender Assessment and Treatment: Theory, Practice and Research
Abstract:
- Workshop
Location: Bordeaux
Session Introduction
Ray Mathis
Chicago Institute for Rational Emotive Behavior Therapy, USA
Title: The mental and emotional tool kit for life: Education that can be very therapeutic an ounce of prevention worth many pounds of cure
Time : 12:15-13:00
Biography:
Ray Mathis was a health education teacher for 33 years. He recognized early that the real problem was his students generated too much emotion in their lives. It’s why he became trained in Rational Emotive Behavior Therapy (REBT) and Education (REBE). He developed the “Mental and Emotional Tool Kit for Life” for his students. Since retiring from the classroom, he has represented the Chicago Institute for REBT and spoken to teachers and students in school and universities, and at state and national conventions to advocate for teaching the “tools” to all our teachers and students, and parents if possible. He believes the “tools” would be a major ounce of prevention worth many pounds of cures for so many of the mental health and other problems both young and older people so often struggle with. Like Dr Albert Ellis, he believes therapy should be educational, and education can be very therapeutic
Abstract:
In a 1969 speech to the APA, AG Miller said: “I can think of nothing that would pose a greater challenge to psychologists and that would be more relevant to human welfare than to discover how best to give psychology away”. The mental and emotional tool kit for life does that–gives psychology away. We have always had and continue to have too many people who generate more emotion than is helpful or necessary in response to their life events, more than they want to have, more than they know what to do with. Most mental illness is literally defined by generating a dysfunctional amount of emotion. This emotion drives and gives purpose to so many unhealthy, self-defeating, even dangerous behaviors, i.e. violence, abuse, alcohol and drug abuse, suicide. These behaviors in turn lead to other problems, i.e. addiction, disability, premature death. The “toolkit” is based on Rational Emotive Behavior Therapy (REBT) and Education (REBE) developed by the late Dr Albert Ellis. The “tools” can be taught to anyone and used by anyone to generate a more functional amount of emotion. They do so largely through cognitive restructuring. People can and will do much to help themselves if given the right “tools”. One of the most important “tools” is developing an internal locus of control. The majority of people walking the planet have an external locus and wrongly blame the events of their lives for how they feel. This needlessly puts them at the mercy of events and causes them to feel worse than necessary. We miss a golden opportunity to correct this while people are in our schools. Teaching them that they have more control over their emotional destiny than they realize would do much to help people generate a more functional amount of emotion in their lives.
Gisele Fernandes
California Institute of Integral Studies, USA
Title: Care for the caregiver: An integral approach to sustaining wellness and preventing compassion fatigue
Time : 11:35-12:35
Biography:
Gisele Fernandes is a licensed psychotherapist, clinical supervisor, organizational consultant, and graduate school professor. She has extensive training and clinical experience in body-oriented approaches to psychotherapy, using an integrative method that is rooted in somatic, humanistic-existential and transpersonal psychologies. Originally from Brazil, she began her career as a counselor in a hospital setting in Rio de Janeiro. From the beginning, she was interested in the body-mind connection and in holistic ways of understanding and treating the complexities of the mind-body system, both from the patient as well as the provider’s perspective. Since 2001, she has been working in the bay area in community mental health and private practice settings. Her therapeutic work integrates sensorimotor trauma approach, attachment-based psychotherapy, and mindfulness. She is a core faculty member at the California Institute of Integral Studies and has been teaching in academic settings since 2008.
Abstract:
Caring for others is a gift. Most people in the health and healing field find a deep sense of meaning in their work and consider it a vocation, a personal and purposeful path. At the same time, giving, caring and healing can take its toll: burnout and compassion fatigue are genuine dangers that can derail or shortcut practitioners’ careers. Whether you are a nurse or another care provider, being with the pain and suffering of others cannot only be draining at times but lead to a general sense of overwhelming, disenchantment and exhaustion. This presentation presents a model of holistic and integral intervention in preventing compassion fatigue in health care providers working in the clinic and hospital settings. The integral approach presented here originated out of a need to support psychological, physical and spiritual health and well-being in individuals and groups who are vulnerable to secondary traumatization and chronic stress in the workplace. It involves the use of yoga, guided imagery, breathing techniques, as well as discussions and psycho-education about compassion fatigue and effective self-care. The presentation addresses the use of cognitive and experiential practices to support healthcare providers in better-utilizing self-awareness and boundaries to prevent compassion fatigue.
- Applied and Health Psychology | Clinical & Counseling Psychology | Cognitive Neuroscience and Neuropsychology | Psychiatry and Psychology
Location: Bordeaux
Chair
David P. Graham
Baylor College of Medicine, USA
Co-Chair
Agneta Schroder
Orebro University, Sweden
Session Introduction
Fouad Ktiri
Institute of Nursing Professions and Health Techniques, Morocco
Title: Mathematical proof of the therapeutic effect of relaxation
Biography:
Ktiri Fouad is a clinical psychologist, a psychology teacher, a researcher and a yoga coach. His experiences in clinical psychology and yoga-relaxation allowed him to publish, in 2015, a paper book entitled "Stress-How to prevent and fight it-New psychological, spiritual, body and cognitive techniques". From 2009, he has animated conferences and participated in many radio psychological programs. His experiences as a physics and computer graduate helped him to combine psychology and mathematics, which allowed him to elaborate a new stress numerical model and published it on 2016. Now, he is continuing to do researches in psychology, and write articles weekly in Moroccan newspapers.
Abstract:
In this paper, we present a mathematical proof of the positive effects of relaxation therapy. We mathematically demonstrate that relaxation, practiced during a period of time, could relieve stress and even make us feel joyful. Based on our tri-transactional theory of stress, our demonstration uses the Ktiri-stress equation (S=PSS+ST) and the positive-negative stimuli notions. Our evidence of the positive effect of relaxation is based on the psychological fact that this therapy generates positive and reduces negative stimuli numbers. This phenomenon, meaning that a person practicing it will be able over time to be exposed to more positive and less negative stimuli, is mathematically expressed by using increasing and decreasing mathematical functions (x=at+b). This demonstration is applied to an example of a stress situation in which a person, supposed so much stressed, is much less exposed to positive stimuli which could fight his stress, and much more to negative stimuli. From this demonstration, which was possible by using mathematical notions, we deduced and developed mathematically two concepts. This latter, we called crisis and critical stress periods, correspond to intervals of time at the end of which the value of a person stress state starts to be reduced and to become neutral respectively.
Merin thomas
All India Institute of Medical Sciences, India
Title: Suffering in silence: Effect of composite package of laughter yoga on perceived stress, quality of sleep and caregiver burden among caregivers of mentally ill clients in AIIMS, New Delhi
Biography:
Merin Thomas is a graduate of College of Nursing, All India Institute of Medical Sciences, New Delhi and is currently pursuing her MSc in Psychiatric Nursing from the same institute. She was awarded the best oral paper at the 21st World Congress of Mental Health (2017).
Abstract:
Background: The well-being of an ill person is directly related to the nature and quality of the care provided by their caregiver. These demands can bring significant levels of stress for the caregiver and can affect their overall quality of life.
Aim: To assess the effect of a composite package of laughter yoga on perceived stress, quality of sleep and caregiver burden among caregivers of mentally ill clients in AIIMS, New Delhi.
Methodology: A Quasi-experimental study of 60 caregivers of mentally ill patients split into control (n=30) and experimental group (n=30). The caregivers in the experimental group were administered 7 sessions of laughter yoga consecutively. The pre-test was taken before the intervention and post-test were taken on the 8th day and 14th day. Data was collected using Perceived stress scale, Pittsburgh sleeps quality index and Zarit caregiver burden.
Results: In the experimental group after 7 sessions of laughter yoga there was a significant reduction in perceived stress scores of the caregivers on 8th day (p<0.001) and 14th day (p<0.001); a significant reduction in quality of sleep scores on 8th day (p<0.001) and 14th day (p<0.001) and in the caregiver burden scores on 8th day (p<0.001) and 14th day (p<0.001) compared to baseline values.
Conclusion: Caregivers of mentally ill clients suffer from high levels of stress and caregiver burden as well as poor quality of sleep. Therefore, special attention should be given to managing the caregiver’s stress and burden so as to improve the quality of care provided by them.
Biography:
Abstract:
Effective interpersonal problem-solving skills have been identified as essential aspects for successful functioning in daily life. Patients with schizophrenia suffer significant psychosocial skills deficits which pervade all stages of illness. The ability to resolve interpersonal problems is a key aspect of the social functioning of adjustment, it is a skill in which many patients are deficient. However, a poor social competence is thought to be associated with less adequate behavior and vulnerability to relapse. If those patients learn interpersonal problem–solving skills from a systematic method and successfully apply them in their daily life, then the beliefs about self- competence in handling regarding interpersonal problems will develop and improve their adjustment and self-esteem. This study aimed to determine the impact of the designed intervention program on interpersonal problem-solving skills and self-esteem of schizophrenic patients.
Research design: The Quasi-experimental design was applied.
Setting: The study was carried out in a psychiatric medical center that was affiliated to Tanta University, Egypt.
Subjects: The participants of this study were thirty patients with schizophrenia, they were selected by convenience sampling method.
Tools of study: Tool (1): Interpersonal problem solving procedure (IPSP) created by researchers after review of literature and guided by The mean-end problem-solving procedure (MEPS), that developed by (Spivack.G, Shure.M, and Platt,J (1985), and Assessment of Interpersonal problem- solving skills (AIPSS), that developed by Donahoe. P et al (1990). Tool (2): Rosenberg self-esteem scale (RSES): This scale developed by Rosenberg, 1979. The intervention program: It developed by researchers after reviewing the literature, and guided by work of Pu Irene Qao.H, and Qenlu.S (1999). It was applied in small six groups; each group was composed of five studied patients. The program consisted of 12 sessions, 3 times per week for four weeks.
Results: There was a statistically significant difference in favor of the post-intervention phase regarding Interpersonal problem-solving procedure and self-esteem as compared to the pre-intervention phase.
Conclusion: The program was effective in improving interpersonal problem-solving ability and self-esteem among patients with schizophrenia. The program was effective in reducing the stress level and improves coping strategies
Anna Nakamura
University of Tokyo, Japan
Title: Negative bias to sad facial expressions in depressive symptomatology: Considering the autism spectrum
Biography:
Anna Nakamura is a clinical psychologist and a PhD researcher in Japan. As a practitioner, she has been mainly working with cognitive and behavioral therapy to conditions such as depression and obsession. Through her clinical experience in hospitals and with education, her passion for improving mental health has increased and she learned the current status and issues in various clinical fields. As a researcher, she has a background of experimental psychology on perception and cognition. She has the ability to infer how the world is looked and felt by people that enables her to look from the depressed patient’s point of view. Her clinical and academic skills are advancing interactively, which makes her a unique expert in depression.
Abstract:
Background: Although depression as a state is qualitatively equal for both clinical major depressive disorder (MDD) and non-clinical groups, the state of non-clinical depressive symptomatology still has room for consideration. The negative bias of cognition in MDD has been intensively examined. In particular, negative bias in facial expression recognition leads to less satisfaction in the interpersonal relationship, which causes the aggregation of depression. Nakamura et al., first revealed that negative bias to sad facial expressions exists for non-clinical individuals with higher depressive symptoms. However, no research has examined the effects of the autism spectrum (AS) so far. Autism spectrum disorders involve a high risk of depression and facial expression recognition is a part of the “Theory of Mind”, which is typically inhibited in AS. The purpose of this research was to discover the effects of AS on non-clinical depression and on the negative bias to sad faces related to depression.
Methods: Negative bias was measured using facial task, displaying the whole facial stimuli (happy/sad faces at 4 intensity level), and asking participants to label stimuli according to three options: happy, neutral, and sad. Depression was measured by 2nd edition Beck Depression Inventory (BDI) and AS by Autism-Spectrum Quotient (AQ). Participants were 58 university students.
Findings: Although there was a significant correlation between AQ and BDI (r=0.47, p=0.003), AQ and the negative bias showed no correlation (r=0.09ns). Control of AQ, partial correlation of negative bias, and BDI were significant (r=0.36, p=0.03), which indicates that AS does not affect negative bias in depressive symptomatology.
Conclusion: This experiment first considered AS’s effects on negative bias in non-clinical depression and showed that the negative bias toward sad faces is independently due to depression. The findings can contribute to the understanding of non-clinical depression and its prevention.
- Poster Presentation
Location: Bordeaux
Session Introduction
Amanda Mendez
Loma Linda University School of Behavioral Health, USA
Title: Higher levels of agreeableness are associated with higher ratings of therapeutic alliance
Time : PN&AP 01
Biography:
Amanda Mendez is a fourth year PsyD student at Loma Linda University, School of Behavioral Health. She has a growing interest in the mechanisms producing therapeutic outcomes. Her experience includes 10 years working with persons in crisis and histories of traumatic experiences, assisting them make changes in their lives. With the most recent three years as a clinician providing outpatient therapy, this clinical experience has revealed the importance of a therapeutic alliance, and understanding what helps others who are in need of change. Recognizing various strengths of therapists and growing in the knowledge of the many aspects and processes of therapy, has provided her strong motivation to conduct this research. Her ultimate goal is to expand research on the therapeutic alliance and therapist personality, inform the training of therapists in order to improve patient outcomes, and serve as a consultant to educate and inform other training programs.
Abstract:
The relationship between the therapeutic alliance and psychotherapy outcome has been well documented in the literature. The therapeutic alliance is considered a “main curative component” in the interpersonal process of therapy and is the foundation necessary for successful therapy outcomes across various orientations of psychotherapy. Still, far less research has examined the relationship between specific therapist personality characteristics and the quality of the therapeutic alliance. The current study was aimed at examining the relationship between several therapist personality traits and the therapeutic alliance. The study utilized the Working Alliance Inventory Short-Form (WAI-S) to measure the client-reported therapeutic alliance, and the NEO-FFI to measure therapist personality. A one-way ANOVA was conducted to compare the relationship of agreeableness to the therapeutic alliance in groups of highly rated, average rated, and low rated working alliance. Therapists were grouped by the quality of their working alliance score and the scoring profile associated with each factor. On the NEO-FFI, agreeableness is divided into levels of low (T=35-44), average (T=45-55), high (T=56-65), and very high (T>65). Those who scored in the high range (T>56) of agreeableness demonstrate the highest levels of warmth, empathy, honesty, and trustworthiness. Results indicated that agreeableness was found to be significantly related to the quality of the therapeutic alliance (F[2, 39]=7.09, p<0.00). Overall, higher levels of agreeableness were associated with higher ratings of therapeutic alliance, as well as the highest level of participation in the study. These findings suggest that therapist agreeableness is one important ingredient in strengthening the therapeutic alliance and reducing premature dropout. These findings also suggest the importance of therapists better understanding their degree of agreeableness and, if necessary, working to develop greater agreeableness for the purpose of strengthening their therapeutic alliances with patients.
Hamzah Alghzawi
University of Maryland, USA
Title: Differences in remission from nicotine use disorder by tobacco treatment services among people with severe mental illness
Time : PN&AP 02
Biography:
Hamzah Alghzawi, University of Maryland, USA
Abstract:
Objective: People living with mental illnesses are two to four times more likely to be dependent on nicotine and have more difficulty remitting from nicotine use disorder (NUD). A growing body of evidence supports pharmacological interventions to assist smoking cessation in people with severe mental illness (SMI; i.e. lifetime major depressive disorder, bipolar disorders, or schizophrenia). Little is known about whether non-pharmacological treatment services are also associated with high probability of remission from NUD and whether the time from NUD onset until full remission from NUD differs by tobacco treatment services (pharmacological services, non-pharmacological services, or both services).
Methods: A population sample of 726 American lifetime adult smokers with SMI and a history of NUD who had a history of seeking tobacco treatment services were identified in a limited public use dataset of the 2012-2013 National Epidemiologic Survey on Alcohol and Related Conditions (NESARC-III). Individuals who did not meet any DSM 5 criteria other than craving in the past year were classified as having remitted. Participants self-reported ages of NUD onset and remission (individuals not in remission were censored at their current age). Survival analysis was used to compare the probability of remission from NUD and the time needed for full remission from NUD by tobacco treatment services. The analysis took into account the complex sampling design and controlled for possible confounders (i.e. sociodemographics) and covariates (i.e. comorbidity with another mental illness).
Results: The study sample was primarily female (61.2%), non-Hispanic White (84.4%), between 45 to 65 years of age (51.4%), from the south (32.0%) residing in urban areas (75.3%). Out of those who sought tobacco treatment services, only 32.3% had remitted (6% had used pharmacological treatment services, 41.7% had used non-pharmacological treatment services, and 52.3% had used both). The proportion that remitted with a history of pharmacological treatment services was 17.6%. Remission was more frequent among those using non-pharmacological treatment services (28.5%) or when both types of tobacco treatment services were used (19.6%). In models controlling for confounders and covariates, the probability of remission from NUD was higher among those who had non-pharmacological services (HR=1.95, 95%CI: 1.93, 1.97) or those who had both treatment services (HR=1.52, 95%CI: 1.52, 1.55) compared to those who only had pharmacological services. The average time needed for full remission from NUD was 35 years (95%CI: 32.2, 37.6) among the smokers who had non-pharmacological treatment services, compared to 37 years (95%CI: 32.1, 42.3) among those who had pharmacological services and 47 years (95%CI: 43.9, 49.8) among those who had both treatment services.
Conclusions: The current study suggests a clinical need for non-pharmacological interventions to promote the probability of remission from NUD among smokers with SMI. Psychiatric nurses could play a role in educating and encouraging smokers with SMI to seek and utilize non-pharmacological treatment services that might improve the probability of remission from NUD and facilitate prolonged abstinence.
Acknowledgments: NESARC-III is funded by the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA) with support from the intramural program and National Institutes of Health.
Thiago Amaro Machado
Hospital Israelitas Albert Einstein, Brazil
Title: The effectiveness of long distance smoking cessation programs
Time : PN&AP 03
Biography:
Thiago Amaro Machado is a specialist in Psychologists in hospital practice by Santa Casa de Misericordia. Psychologist reference of the in-patient areas in medical and surgical and area of smoking cessation of the Hospital Israelites Albert Einstein. Graduated in Psychology from Pontifícia Universidade Católica-Campinas.
Abstract:
Smoking cessation programs are faced with unsatisfactory results due to high dropout rates, low effectiveness, and high average costs. In this scenario, the mental health team of a large Brazilian private hospital developed and conducted a research on the effectiveness of long distance smoking cessation programs. The main objective is to demonstrate the effectiveness of this service model in smoking cessation. The program´s duration is twelve weeks, with both psychological and psychiatrical evaluations for the diagnosis and a treatment proposal. The assistance to the patient is conducted through electronic media. Eleven weekly basis appointments are scheduled it. Motivation interview and preparation techniques such consideration of barriers and benefits to change, counseling regarding about the advantages of decreasing the number of cigarettes until and the definition of the smoking cessation day is used during the initial smoking cessation until the patient reaches the maintenance stage. In psychiatric care, two electronic appointments are performed for a reassessment of the initially prescribed medication (bupropion and nicotine patch). Sixty patients were treated during the research. In a preliminary analysis, there was an 18% dropout rate with an overall rate of success in smoking cessation of 70%. For patients who completed treatment, this percentage reaches 85.71%. In a preliminary analysis, researchers observed that the use of an electronic technology improves adherence to the program since patients are able to maintain their normal daily routines, eliminating the loss of time to get to the appointment, thus decreasing absenteeism and improving the effectiveness of smoking cessation.
Maya Corman
University Clermont Auvergne, France
Title: A new integrative and preventive intervention program for patients undergoing hematopoietic stem cell transplant: First results of a pilot study with students
Time : PN&AP 04
Biography:
Maya Corman (University Clermont Auvergne, LAPSCO CNRS UMR 6024) is a second-year PhD student in psychooncology under the supervision of Pr Michael Dambrun, Pr Regis Peffault Delatour, and Jacques-Olivier Bay. Her thesis work focuses on a psychological approach of people with hemopathy and undergoing stem hematopoietic cell transplantation process. This topic has two issues: the first issue aims to identify deleterious (e.g anxiety) or protective (e.g optimism) psychological factors involved in the different steps of bone marrow transplantation process. The second aims to put in place preventive intervention focused on emotion and attention regulation in order to reduce psychological distress before hospitalization and provide to patients some emotional and attentional resources to cope with this event in an adaptive way. By proposing such an intervention via a digital platform this program aims to overcome hospitalization constraints like isolation and treatment side effects getting patients physically and psychologically vulnerable.
Abstract:
Statement of the problem: People undergoing bone marrow transplantation may have some psychological symptoms such as depression and anxiety, and physical symptoms as pains all along the process, especially during hospitalization. An investigation about a new preventive intervention to help people to cope with this event has been led. This program is divided into three subtasks: the first one is a new attentional bias modification task, the second one is an optimizing emotional regulation task and the third one is a mindfulness intervention. Each task aims to facilitate the realization of the next one. The program would be implementable at home and during hospitalization with a digital platform. Before implementation in hospital, a pilot study was conducted in the laboratory with the first subprogram.
Methodology and Theoretical Orientation: 38 students were recruited (Mage=22.6 , SD=7.2, Nexperimental condition=19). This attentional bias modification task consisted in detecting a positive picture amongst three others (negatives and neutrals), moving it toward the screen’s center and savoring the associated emotion. Before and after training they realized an eye tracker procedure in order to detect the presence of an attentional bias modification.
Findings: The increase of positivity bias (i.e. a longer fixation time on positive stimuli) was significantly greater in the experimental condition than in the control one. There is no significant decrease in negativity bias in the experimental condition as a control. The effects of the task on positivity bias tend to be greater for subjects with depressive symptoms.
Conclusion and significance: the First result of this pilot study provides interesting elements to pursue our investigations. Next step is to test the effectiveness of the second intervention (a positive psychology one) with the completion of the first task. Finally, we will test the whole program before proposing it to patients before and during their hospitalization.
Han Sung Ju
Seoul National University Hospital, South Korea
Title: Cognitive improvement by food substitutes using PhytoMeal, Pitfalls for Neuropsycholgical testing
Time : PN&AP 05
Biography:
Dr. Han SJ has her expertise in evaluation and passion in improving the health and wellbeing. Her main area of research field is horticulture therapy, expecially dementic patients. Psychological evaluation tool and application of this method is of importance and, currently she is joing the clinical research developing functional food, shown above abstract. The necessary psycological evaluation would be of importance for the future outcome. Her visiting this congress is to explore the international activity of psychological evaluation, creates new pathways for improving healthcare. Both in hospital and education institutions, she would like to broaden the knowledge of medical, expecially neuropsycholical field. Her background or thesis is positive psychological analysis combined with horticulture therapy, which is the first attempt in the world.
Abstract:
Increasing aging population accelerate the prevalence of patients with dementia. They were initially complaining or unaware their cognitive decling, thus proper neuropsyological evaluations are sometimes missed. Recently, in addition to the developing medicine that targeting the amyloid plaque in case of Alzheimer’s disease, there are several important attention for the exploring the functional food that improve or at least delayed the progression of cognitive decline. Among the candidate for the Salicornia Europaea, a plant in the ocean,-the plant cannot grow in the salted environment-had been selected and explored the possibilities for its anti-choline esterate inhibitory effect, that lead to the improve the neuropsycholgical performance. In vitro and in vivo test had been shown effective and clinical trial with several series of psychological tests have be on going. To be able to use in human, efficacy and safety of this Salicornia Europaea should be of importance in order to review from KFDA (Food and Drug administration). Currently, improvement of K-MMSE and ADAS-cog are main primary endpoints in Korea. However, determining process selecting proper psychological test were not organized. Therefore, there can be possible limitation that mask the real efficacy of functional food approvement. If the result was not significant, different psychological tests should be remained for further evaluation of endpoint. International standard for applying psychological evaluation would be of benefit. More efficient detailed or reliable evaluation of psychological analysis that can be applied to the development of cognitive-enhancing medicinal food.
- Video Presentations
Location: Bordeaux
Session Introduction
Susanna Mittermaier
The Pragmatic Psychology Center, Austria
Title: Pragmatic psychology what abilities are hiding behind so called disabilities
Biography:
Susanna Mittermaier is a licensed psychologist, psychotherapist and author of the #1 international bestselling book, Pragmatic Psychology: Practical Tools for Being Crazy Happy. As a global speaker, she offers a new paradigm on psychology and therapy called pragmatic psychology. She is known for her revolutionary perspective on mental illness and for inspiring people all over the world to access the greatness they are beyond abuse and disease. She offers a different, healing perspective on pain and suffering, unveils people’s brilliance, and guides others to see problems and difficulties instead as possibilities and potent choices. Growing up in Vienna, Austria, she learned an enormous capacity to facilitate lightness, joy and ease in a unique and profoundly healing way. She studied to become a psychologist at the university of Lund in Sweden and worked as a psychologist, therapist and counselor at the university clinic in Sweden both in children oncology and in the mental health department. She also conducted numerous neuropsychological testing’s. She developed a new psychology, called pragmatic psychology. She has been featured in publications such as TV Soap, Maria
Abstract:
Background: Pragmatic psychology started with the question, what else is possible for people with the diagnosis. Are they truly disabled or are those disabilities hiding not yet discovered abilities? As a clinical psychologist and psychotherapist, I had started to investigate on this topic. I worked at the university clinic in Lund, Sweden with diagnosing, therapy, coaching, neuropsychological testing, and method development. The patient group was very diverse. People with ADHD, ADD, autism, OCD, depression, anxiety, PTSD, substance addiction, psychosis, personality disorders came to me for evaluation and therapy.
Objectives: The target with pragmatic psychology is to empower clients to know that they know. Most clients are used to receiving answers from experts rather than being their own experts. Pragmatic psychology is about having no point of view what is right and wrong, sane and insane. Pragmatic psychology uses questions to facilitate the client to find out what strongness is hiding behind the wrongness to open the doors to truly creating their lives. Psychology used to be the study of knowledge and became the study of behavior, fitting in and adapting to normality. Pragmatic psychology takes psychology back to being the study of knowledge for people to create greater lives than what can be achieved by controlling behavior. Diversity is being used as a strength and resource.
Methods: The methods used with pragmatic psychology are questions and tools to empower the client to know what they know. Questions empower, answers disempower. Every true question unlocks what has not been available as a possibility the moment before.
Results: Those are countless. ADHD patients being able to use their hyperactivity as a resource to create their lives and businesses. Depression and anxiety being discovered as extreme awareness that no longer, being overwhelming and having to be defended against, can be used as sources of creation. Patients coming for anger management discovering their potency that was covered by their labels. Everything is the opposite of what it appears to be. PTSD and abuse ceasing to haunt clients and the potency slumbering all those years behind the victimizing story being discovered. Clients saying that therapists having given up on them and who now see that they have what it takes to the greatness they truly are. Autism being discovered as a highly interactive and communicating group regardless of what is being said about that diagnosis. Client after client saying if I just had this perspective and those tools years ago my life would look totally different now.
Conclusions: What if having to have problems was no longer the paradigm to live and be on our planet? What if our past no longer determines our future but can be created and chosen as desired at every moment? What if we all knew what works for us no matter what is being put out there as conclusions and answers? Time to create a different world?
Biography:
Margaret Reece BA Hons is passionate about helping people with C-PTSD overcome their struggles. Through her life experiences of C-PTSD and the research of leading trauma experts, she aims to narrow the gap between therapist and client. A childhood, devoid of any predictable adult attachment figure, plus cumulative trauma, led to both emotions and thought processes shutting down. She was hospitalized, aged 19, for circa four years, given 30-40 ECTs, insulin therapy, and medication; no success. She divorced herself from professional help to avoid lifetime institutionalization. In her sixties, she sought professional help; she had been misdiagnosed, aged 19, with what would now be known as a schizo-affective disorder, and inappropriate treatment given. Two further misdiagnoses followed within the last ten years. The antipsychotic medication she had taken for 56years became unavailable, no warning; no substitute available. She set out to transform herself and others. Her book, Hope Restored: A guide to embracing the storms of C-PTSD is self-help, interspersed with memoir. It is being published later this year.
Abstract:
Statement: The traditional model of diagnosis, based on overt symptoms is outdated and leads to many misdiagnoses, inaccurate treatment, and potentially ruined lives. Medical advances in the last 5-10 years relating to the diagnosis of C-post-traumatic stress disorder, using physical evidence by means of imaging and biofeedback would revolutionize diagnoses, but it will be in vain unless:
- The knowledge is made available to health professionals at all levels.
- The treatment is made accessible to the masses, not just the select few, who can afford it.
Purpose: To integrate personal and professional perspectives relating to diagnoses and treatments of C-PTSD in the 1960s and today. No predictable adult attachment figure in my childhood to provide the necessary nurture needed for me to develop healthy life-coping strategies led to cumulative trauma. At age 19, I shut down, could feel no emotion other than fear, and was incapable of rational thought. I was hospitalized for 3-4 years, given inappropriate treatment, and discharged to manage what I considered to be a hostile world alone. In the 1960s, the traditional DSM classification was used, based on overt symptoms. C-PTSD as a diagnosis was virtually unheard of by most professionals. Clients were guinea pigs; many lives were ruined by inappropriate treatment, some institutionalized for life. Today, DSM classification is still the main source of diagnosis. No one is exempt from trauma, albeit in varying degrees. But as each of us is unique, so are our responses. How can one method of diagnosis fit everyone? But doctors do need guidelines. There have been tremendous advances, especially in the last 5-10years, which would enable doctors to base their diagnoses on physical evidence using imaging and biofeedback.
Result: Diagnoses can be made, based on the root cause, not just overt symptoms.
Conclusion: Unless this knowledge is made accessible to all professionals, and the treatment made affordable to the masses, misdiagnoses and ruined lives will remain as before.