4.4 • 856 Ratings
🗓️ 17 July 2017
⏱️ 33 minutes
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Fabrice begins with another question on OCD—if you successfully extinguish the symptoms with Exposure and Response prevention, would they just resurface in some other form, such as worrying, or some other anxiety disorder. David agrees, and describes the solution to this problem.
Then David describes his treatment of a pregnant woman with OCD who was afraid her baby would be switched at the hospital so that she’d end up with the wrong baby. Although she rationally recognized that this fear was irrational, she could not shake it from her mind, and obsessed about it constantly.
After trying more than 30 CBT techniques that did not work, David used the What-If Technique to pinpoint her deepest fear, which turned out to be quite shocking, to say the least. He then encouraged her, with some reluctance, to confront this fear using Cognitive Flooding.
After describing the surprising outcome, David and Fabrice discuss the fact that 75% of American therapists are afraid to use Exposure Techniques because of the fear that the patient is too fragile, or they will re-traumatize the patient. David reminds us that this is “reverse hypnosis,” where the patient hypnotizes the therapist into believing something that is not true. If the patient is successful, and the therapist agrees not to use Exposure, the prognosis for effective treatment is quite poor. David gives an example of a therapist who was afraid to ask an OCD patient to drink one ounce of coca cola—something the patient feared would drive him into insanity!
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0:00.0 | Hello and welcome to the Feeling Good podcast. |
0:12.4 | I am your host, Fabrice Knight. |
0:14.7 | And joining me here in the Murrieta Studios is Dr. David Burns. |
0:19.0 | Hi, David. |
0:20.0 | Hi, Fabrice. |
0:23.8 | Dr. David Burns has been a pioneer in the development of cognitive therapy, and he is the creator of the new team therapy. He is the author of |
0:30.2 | Feeling Good, which has sold over 5 million copies in the United States, and has been translated into |
0:35.5 | over 20 languages. He is an emeritus adjunct clinical professor |
0:40.0 | of psychiatry at the Stanford University School of Medicine. This episode contains some graphic |
0:47.1 | material that may be disturbing to some listeners. Listener discretion is advised. |
0:59.2 | This is episode 45 of the Feeling Good podcast. |
1:02.4 | Hello, Fabrice. |
1:03.4 | Oh, hi, David. |
1:04.8 | Tiz me. |
1:20.0 | Before we get started on this, I wanted to mention one more time that you're going to be doing two intensives, one in Canada, when in the San Francisco Bay Area, if you could give us the dates. Yeah, the Canada one will be in Banff, which is a kind of a vacation spot, apparently quite popular in Canada. |
1:28.8 | It'll be July 17th through 20th. |
1:32.0 | 2017, that is? |
1:33.7 | Yeah, that's right, 2017. |
1:35.9 | And if you're interested, it's a great four-day training for mental health professionals |
1:42.8 | in the treatment of depression and all the anxiety |
1:45.3 | disorders using the new team CBT. |
1:49.0 | And you can call Jack Harosi and Associates. |
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