Sunday, November 27, 2011

How to Measure Progress in Psychotherapy



Look, we all agree; we have a triune brain--3 brains in one, each with different functions. So one brain can be sick and the other two not so. Or two brains can be sick as a result of compounded early trauma. So isn't it silly to measure progress in therapy and leave out half or two/thirds of the brain? This is what is going on in psychotherapy today. We do followup studies with paper and pencil tests of mood, attitudes, comprehension and other intellectual/cognitive tests. And what do we get? A one third appraisal. So the mind works but the body is a wreck. The engineer functions very well at work while his body is preparing itself for cancer. Or the mind does not work, as in attention deficit disorder, but the body still gets migraine; or the ......you get the idea. Part of us can be more damaged then the rest of us. But all three parts need to work well and in harmony for us not to get seriously ill.

Can you imagine an MRI specialist studying only the cells in the kidney but not the mind? Not a good idea because the sickness starts up there. And we need to cross-reference all parts to see how they interact. We need to get out of the fragmented approach, taking the head and muscle cells to understand migraine, when all we will understand as a result is how those cells work, not how the system works together with other systems., and how that interaction produces symptoms. Again, I am pleading for a unified field theory of illness; illness of all kinds. Yes we need specialists who know more and more about less and less, know how the muscles in the neck work, how they contract and what happens to the blood vessels, but not anything about headaches, their cause and sudden appearance. Yes, they say the vessels contract and this or that happens to them but never why; never the ultimate cause, and certainly never the demise of the symptom and how we can achieve it.

So we treat a drug addict and we measure him afterward. And she feels great; all those great meals, massages and lectures. They work to drown the fish. But we measure the biology and there is a raging cauldron down below; the cortisol level is chronically high and can be life threatening. So much for self-awareness. Or vice versa: we are strict medical scientists and we measure cortisol and the person seems OK but he still feels terrible.You see what I mean? There are parts of us that need to be examined. It may take a combined crew but it will be more accurate. We have been fragmenting the patient, dissecting her because it is easier to study than the whole system as an ensemble. And we get a full blood panel, and we read the numbers and they tell us whether the patient is sick or not. Not much interpreting going on. We become bean counters, so much of this, too little of that and voila, you got diabetes. And of course it is worse in psychology because we do not have enough precise measurements to give us a precise diagnosis. So we ape medicine and imagine we do. We don't.

18 comments:

  1. Dr. Janov,

    This is exactly my experience.
    One doctor sees only one symptom; then you are sent to another who finds another symptom... Where are the doctors/therapists ect. who see the whole person and his/her history?

    The question is, what can we do? There are only treatments for symptoms. No one is interested in “what causes the problem”.
    Sieglinde

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  2. I hope that the future epilepsy treatment will develop an approach in which visions,
    goals and a team of responsible can raise the quality of treatment as well as the lives of
    the sick. The explosion of knowledge in the brain research and the dynamic therapies in
    combination with modern patient treatment give me the courage to be positive. Future
    neurological clinics will naturally evolve from today's technology-oriented center, with the
    hunting for symptoms with drug recipes as the main weapon, to a more holistic treatment
    center. Teams will analyze and cross-reference the causes which will be treated with therapies, diet, exercise, medication and surgery when all else fails.

    Within a few years, our neurologists have gained a much better knowledge to determine from which type of epilepsy we suffer. There will obviously always be different reasons for
    developing epilepsy and the guidance of a neurologist is mandatory. Medications are from both a short and long-term perspective a necessary need for those who cannot or will not use, for example, Primal Therapy or other alternative solutions. For those who are able to go to therapy a flexible administration of medicine may act as a balancing aid. This flexibility will depend on teamwork between the patient, the therapist and the neurologist.

    The current knowledge explosion is likely to make it less scaring to be an epileptic in the future when the fragmented approach finally has been revealed as inadequate.

    It is sad to live in a time when it is easier to split an atom than to blow up a prejudice.

    Albert Einstein

    Jan Johnsson

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  3. I was talking to a CBT Psych about Primal last night. He was interested, to his credit, tho ultimately said he would "like to go deeper, but (what he does) works". But at what cost??? And does it really work? It is a bandaid, with a cost.
    Time and again I see how people, even professionals in the field, cannot-will not necessarily understand Primal, as they are not perceiving from a unified field theory.
    When I first discovered Primal I had a strong Science background, passion and aptitude. Perhaps all Primal literature should come w/a basic intro on the triune brain etc.
    I write this as I try to starve off my up-tenth migraine. Keeping codeine down with Maxolon, hyperventilating without dizziness windows open, the heater on for low blood pressure and writing in the dark. When I tell ppl how I came to suffer this hell I even point out the markedly smaller right nostril and deviated septum. They just look at me as if *I* am deviated..

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  4. Art,

    with regards to your blog about creativity & whether artists tend to die from heart disease rather than cancer. I chose 23 prominent Australian artists to see what they died from, but could only find the causes of death with 14. Of these, 7 died from some form of cardiovascular disease either directly or indirectly. So that's 50% ! In general about 33% of Australians die from heart disease. There may be something in your theory , though 14 artists is a pretty small sample. Of the 23 only 3 made it into their 90's - Lloyd Rees, died aged 94; James Gleeson, 92; & Hans Heysen 90 - maybe they died of natural causes?

    Anyway here is the list- (artists name, age at death, cause of death).

    1. Tom Roberts, 75, cancer.
    2. Frederick McCubbin,62,asthma & heart failure.
    3. William Dobell,71,hypersensitive heart disease.
    4. Ian Fairweather,83,heart attack.
    5. Russell Drysdale,69,cancer,but a stroke a year before he died.
    6. Fred Williams,55,lung cancer.
    7. Clifton Pugh,65,heart attack.
    8. Donald Friend,74, emphysema & mild stroke.
    9. Brett Whiteley, 53, heroin overdose.
    10.Arthur Boyd,78,a minor & major stroke 2 months before dying.
    11.John Percival,77, stroke.
    12.Albert Tucker,84, heart failure.
    13.Clement Meadmore, 65, Parkinsons disease.
    14.Howard Arkley,48, heroin overdose.

    You can check out these great Aussie artists on the internet, Also Willem De Kooning lived into his 90's but had alzheimers in the end - when does one die from natural causes or something else ? Or do a lot of us die from old age AND the subconscious forces ?

    Best wishes, Len Gibbs.

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  5. Hi,

    How well I know now that I am sick in my feelings.

    I can one moment 'seem' to be ok. . . in my head I think to myself: "well, you're ok now Paul eh"? Then almost as if by magic I'm suddenly aware of something else in me boiling up, welling up and bang there are my true feelings and I'm on the floor screaming.

    It is as if there is a switch in there and it is either thrown or not. Unless you've had this experience repeatedly you really would not know how true Arts' words above really are.

    Most people are utterly unaware of the difference between thoughts, feelings and sensations.

    Least of all the 3rd line types.

    Paul G.

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  6. What is there more to add? If we do not understand what you write… it means only one thing… and that is… our “understanding” serves other purposes… simple and very clear.

    Frank

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  7. A facebook comment:"Hi, what is your thoughts about falling in love?Is this aspect just biology or is it predicted from our emotional history or.... I just can figure it out. I would be very happy if you could give me some vievs on this. Thanks. from a former patient."

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  8. And my answer: Please read my Primal Healing for a discussion of love. Also my book on sex (Sex and the Subconscious: buy it at smash box) has a chapter on it. art

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  9. Len: Hey you can't win them all. Thanks for your efforts by the way. Art.

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  10. Len, are you Australian? I am an Australian artist (yikes!), I often put my hand on my heart to go to sleep :)
    My migraine advanced last night b-t-w, hideous.. I reached a point where I simply couldn't breathe. Only vomiting released it. So f-g painful and terrifying. I cannot wait to be rid of them.

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  11. Hey, just wanted to add report today the Australian (Federal) Gov't is going to spend $5 BILLION over the nx few yrs "prioritising" mental health care.
    Imagine if the that could be spent on Primal????
    I AM SERIOUS

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  12. Jacquie: Should I remind you all that I do not go on forever. art

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  13. Jacquie: If you are serious then you must do something about it. art

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  14. Art,

    with regards to the little survey I did on Australian artists dying from heart disease or cancer, I must emphazise that 7 died from heart disease and only 3 died from cancer - so this does seem to give weight to your theory - even if it is only a small sample. I have just discovered that 1 in 2 in Australia will be diagnosed with cancer by the age of 85. Cancer is the leading cause of death here !!

    Jacquie,

    Yes, but originally a migrant.

    Len Gibbs.

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  15. Len thanks for the input. interesting yes? art

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  16. Len, where are you? I am in Perth.
    Have you had Primal?

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  17. Hey Len don't forget 75% of us get Melanomas by old age (most fixable), maybe that skews your figures?

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