Q8.
Describe a client scenario where you would choose
to use Erickson’s utilisation technique.
Learning outcomes: 1.1
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(Student
answer here)
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Tutor
feedback (DO NOT delete/edit feedback. Write amendments,
additional information & thoughts underneath this table)
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(Further
student work goes here if requested through feedback)
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Q9.
State two major theories of hypnosis. Outline and
briefly discuss. Using the Harvard citation method detail how you
discovered this information.
Learning outcomes: 2.1, 3.3
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(Student
answer here)
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Tutor
feedback (DO NOT delete/edit feedback. Write amendments,
additional information & thoughts underneath this table)
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(Further
student work goes here if requested through feedback)
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Q10.
By reference to the following article and further
research, appraise, in a professional, factual and non-emotive
manner, the claim that hypnotherapy could save the NHS money.
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Hypnotherapy
'can help' irritable bowel syndrome
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Greater use of hypnotherapy
to ease the symptoms of irritable bowel syndrome would help
sufferers and might save money, says a gastroenterologist.
Dr Roland Valori, editor of
Frontline Gastroenterology, said of the first 100 of his patients
treated, symptoms improved significantly for nine in 10.
He said that although previous
research has shown hypnotherapy is effective for IBS sufferers, it
is not widely used.
This may be because doctors
simply do not believe it works.
Widely ignored
Irritable bowel syndrome (IBS)
is a common gut problem which can cause abdominal pain, bloating,
and sometimes diarrhoea or constipation.
Dr Valori, of Gloucestershire
Royal Hospital, said the research evidence which shows that
hypnotherapy could help sufferers of IBS was first published in
the 1980s.
He thinks it has been widely
ignored because many doctors find it hard to believe that it does
work, or to comprehend how it could work.
He began referring IBS
patients for hypnotherapy in the early 1990s and has found it to
be highly effective.
"To be frank, I have
never looked back," he said.
He audited the first 100 cases
he referred for hypnotherapy and found that the symptoms stopped
completely in four in ten cases with typical IBS.
He says in a further five in
10 cases patients reported feeling more in control of their
symptoms and were therefore much less troubled by them.
"It is pretty clear to me
that it has an amazing effect," he said.
"It seems to work
particularly well on younger female patients with typical
symptoms, and those who have only had IBS for a relatively short
time."
Powerful effect
He believes that it could work
partly by helping to relax patients.
"Of the relaxation
therapies available, hypnotherapy is the most powerful," he
said.
He also says that IBS patients
often face difficult situations in their lives, and hypnotherapy
can help them respond to these stresses in a less harmful way.
NHS guidelines allow doctors
to refer IBS patients for hypnotherapy or other psychological
therapies if medication is unsuccessful and the problem persists.
Dr Valori thinks that if
hypnotherapy were used more widely it could possibly save the NHS
money while improving patient care.
Dr Charlie Murray, Secretary
of the British Gastroenterology Society, said: "There is no
doubt that hypnotherapy is helpful for some patients, but it
depends on the skill and experience of those practising it.
"But the degree to which
it is effective is not well defined.
"I would support using it
as one therapy, but it is no panacea."
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Learning outcomes: 3.4
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(Student
answer here)
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Tutor
feedback (DO NOT delete/edit feedback. Write amendments,
additional information & thoughts underneath this table)
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(Further
student work goes here if requested through feedback)
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Q11.
Devise and outline an appropriate psychological and
hypnotherapy based intervention for pain control, giving factors to
be aware of during the pre-talk and intervention.
Learning outcomes: 1.2
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(Student
answer here)
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Tutor
feedback (DO NOT delete/edit feedback. Write amendments,
additional information & thoughts underneath this table)
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(Further
student work goes here if requested through feedback)
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Q12.
Propose an ethically and therapeutically
appropriate approach for working with an adult whose presenting
problem is weight control who confides in you that they over use
laxatives to control their weight condition.
Learning outcomes: 1.5
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(Student
answer here)
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Tutor
feedback (DO NOT delete/edit feedback. Write amendments,
additional information & thoughts underneath this table)
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(Further
student work goes here if requested through feedback)
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