Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Psychosis (CBT-p): Treatment Overview
Categories:
Department of Psychiatry,
Best Practices in Schizophrenia Treatment (BeST) Center,
Department of Psychiatry,
Best Practices in Schizophrenia Treatment (BeST) Center,
FEP Project ECHO,
CBT-p,
Department of Psychiatry,
Best Practices in Schizophrenia Treatment (BeST) Center,
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Psychosis (CBT-p),
Department of Psychiatry,
Department of Psychiatry,
Best Practices in Schizophrenia Treatment (BeST) Center,
FEP Project ECHO,
Department of Psychiatry,
Best Practices in Schizophrenia Treatment (BeST) Center,
Integrated Primary and Mental Health Care,
Integrated Care @ NEOMED (IC@N) Project ECHO | Tags:
acceptance,
acceptance and commitment therapy for psychosis,
action oriented learning,
activity schedules,
anatomical basis,
anosognosia,
assessment,
assumptions,
assumptions about recovery,
automatic thoughts,
befriending,
behavior,
beliefs about recovery,
building an alliance,
case managers,
CBT,
CBT-p informed care,
CBTp,
clients,
cognitive,
cognitive behavioral therapy,
cognitive model,
collaboration in treatment,
common ground,
community,
Compassion Focused Therapy,
congitive behavrioal therapy for psychosis,
counselors,
covid-19,
curiosity,
daily living,
DBT,
delusions,
dialectical behavior therapy,
education,
emotion,
engagement,
enhancing self-concept,
exposure to trauma,
feedback loops,
genetics,
goal orientation,
grief,
group CBT-p,
hallucinations,
Harry,
Harry Sivec,
high intensity CBT-p,
holistic therapeutic alliance,
insomnia,
low intensity CBT-p,
medications,
mental health providers,
mental illness,
metacognitive deficits,
mindfulness,
mindset of clinician,
neurological,
neutrality,
normalization,
normalizing,
nurse practioners,
pandemic,
patients,
patterns,
peer specialists,
practice modifications,
protective factors,
providers,
psychological,
psychosis,
psychotic symptoms,
reality testing,
recovery,
relationships,
risk factors,
schizophrenia,
sensory experiences,
shared formulation,
siutation,
Sivec,
sleep deprivation,
social distancing,
stigma,
strengths,
stress,
structure,
substance use,
symptoms,
teamwork,
technique orietned,
therapy,
transdiagnostic paradigm,
treatment,
values,
voice hearing,
voices,
vulnerability
Dr. Harry Sivec presents on cognitive behavioral therapy for psychosis (CBTp) and how to use it in treatment approaches.