Q13.
Research the GHR Code of Ethics in relation to
remote and online therapy and other relevant materials and consider
and discuss the potential issues a therapist must consider before
working online.
- Learning outcomes: 1.3
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Q14.
Read the following article and comment and discuss
your views on Epilepsy and Hypnotherapy. .
http://med.stanford.edu/news/all-news/2008/02/hypnosis-helps-doctors-zero-in-on-kids-seizures.html
Hypnosis
helps doctors zero in on kids' seizures
FEB
122008
02/13/08
BY
KRISTA CONGER
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It
was no way for an 11-year-old to live. For a month the boy had
endured daily episodes of uncontrollable jerking and foaming at the
mouth, and his physicians at Lucile
Packard Children's Hospital were concerned that the boy had
epilepsy. Before starting the boy on a lifetime of antiseizure
medications, though, they turned to an unconventional diagnostic
tool: hypnosis.
'Children
are highly suggestible and they have great imaginations,' said
Packard Children's child psychiatrist Richard
Shaw, MD. 'We've found that if we suggest that they are going to
have one of their events while they are in a hypnotic trance, they
will usually have one.'
But
wait. Aren't physicians supposed to try to STOP seizures rather than
searching for new ways to cause them? In a word, yes. But in order to
treat seizures effectively, doctors must learn which parts of the
brain are causing the trouble. Many children who seem to be having
epileptic seizures are actually having an involuntary physical
reaction to psychological stress in their lives. These events require
a vastly different treatment than do true epileptic seizures.
The
only way to pinpoint the true cause is to monitor the child's brain
activity during an event. Connecting a panel of electrodes to a
child's scalp is relatively easy and painless. Conducting a 'seizure
watch' of indefinite length is another matter.
'It's
very difficult for parents to spend three or four days in the
hospital hoping their child has a seizure,' said Packard Children's
chief of pediatric neurology, Donald
Olson, MD. 'It puts them in a very uncomfortable place
emotionally.' Furthermore, some hospitalized children, removed from
the very stressors that may be causing the events, never have a
seizurelike event.
Hypnosis
can speed the process considerably, said Shaw and Olson. Together
with former medical student Neva Howard, they tested the procedure on
nine children between the ages of 8 to 16 whose seizurelike events
included twitching, loss of consciousness, shaking, jerking and
falling. Their results were published online in January in Epilepsy
& Behavior. The
physicians needed to know whether these were true epileptic events,
which are best treated by medication, or nonepileptic events caused
by psychological stress or other neurological problems.
'We
can't always distinguish epileptic from nonepileptic events visually,
or through descriptions by family or friends,' said Olson, an
associate professor of neurology, of neurosurgery and of pediatrics
at the School of Medicine. 'But regardless of the cause, these are
disabling, life-altering events that need to be treated.'
The
authors believe that, although hypnosis may not work for every child,
the technique is an important tool that can speed proper diagnosis
and treatment for children suffering from seizurelike events.
To
hypnotize the subjects, Shaw, an associate professor of psychiatry
and behavioral sciences and of pediatrics at the School of Medicine,
first used a combination of deep breathing and progressive muscle
relaxation to induce a state of relaxation and deep focused attention
in the subjects. He then used a combination of imagery and suggestion
to induce one of their typical seizurelike events. Children typically
visualize being at one of their favorite places - for one teen, it
was on a beach in the Bahamas. After a hypnotic trance was
established, Shaw would then direct the child to recall the feelings
or events that usually precede a typical seizure. Electrodes on the
child's scalp recorded their brain activity during the session.
In
eight out of nine cases, Shaw could successfully trigger a
seizurelike event with this procedure. After an appropriate
monitoring interval, Shaw then directed the hypnotized child to
'return' to his or her favorite place and the episode would stop.
Using this technique, the physicians found that all eight of the
subjects were experiencing nonepileptic events.
'We
had a number of clues that these particular children might not have
epilepsy,' said Olson, 'but hypnosis helped us confirm our
suspicions.' Physicians begin to suspect causes other than epilepsy
if an individual has a variety of episodes, if the person's cognition
is unaffected despite frequent seizures or if the person has a
pre-existing psychiatric diagnosis.
Were
the kids in the study relieved to find they didn't have epilepsy?
'Yes and no,' said Shaw. 'It's important to explain very clearly that
although these events are psychologically based, they are completely
out of a child's control.' He and Olson compare the events, which are
a type of condition called conversion disorder, to other well-known
ways that stress and emotions affect other bodily functions, such as
migraines, ulcers and blushing.
Stanford
is part of an ongoing multicenter study of these nonepileptic events
to better understand their causes and possible treatments. For now,
Shaw often couples psychotherapy with self-hypnosis lessons to teach
children how to avoid the events.
'When
they're feeling out of control, this is a tool they can use. They
know that they were able to 'turn off' an event during the initial
hypnosis, and that gives them confidence to try it themselves,' said
Shaw.
In
general, people are growing more comfortable with the idea of
hypnosis in a medical setting, said Olson. 'The first reaction of
many people may be to equate hypnosis with some sort of black magic.
But once we explain the reasons and benefits, they're very
accepting.'
By
KRISTA CONGER
Krista
Conger is a science writer for the medical school’s Office of
Communication & Public Affairs.
Learning outcomes: 1.3
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Q15.
If your client has an epileptic seizure advise the
steps you would take to care for the client.
Learning outcomes: 1.11
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Q16.
How would you address the following situation. A
husband has paid for his wife to have a stop smoking session. The
wife does not want to stop smoking however the husband is adamant
because he discovered one of their young children trying to smoke one
of her cigarettes.
Learning outcomes: 4.1
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Q17.
Criteria for empirically
supported therapies have been defined by Chambless and
Hollon (1998). When is a therapy considered efficacious in this
context?
Learning outcomes: 5.7
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