Clinical psychologists' use of transformative models of psychosis
Journal article
Cooke, A. and Brett, C. 2020. Clinical psychologists' use of transformative models of psychosis. Clinical Psychology & Psychotherapy. 27 (1), pp. 87-96. https://doi.org/10.1002/cpp.2411
Authors | Cooke, A. and Brett, C. |
---|---|
Abstract | Some theories (e.g. Jackson's Paradigm Shifting Hypothesis) and many personal accounts suggest that some psychotic crises, whilst distressing, can also be transformative, leading to growth and valued outcomes. However, little is known about the extent to which this idea informs mainstream mental health care. Clinical psychologists are influential advocates of psychosocial approaches more broadly: This study explored their use of transformative models. Twelve U.K. clinical psychologists were interviewed: Transcripts informed a grounded theory. No participants saw psychosis as a purely biological problem where the content of experiences is irrelevant. Two held a “biopsychosocial” model, viewing psychosis as an illness with psychosocial elements. Most either held a continuum view (i.e., schizotypy), in which psychosis proneness was also associated with positive attributes such as creativity or sensitivity, or a “fully psychological” view, seeing experiences as meaningful and/or as adaptive responses to events. Many believed that psychosis can be transformative in a broad sense, that is, lead to “post‐traumatic growth.” Some went further, believing that it can be a purposeful (e.g., an attempt, albeit painful and sometimes unsuccessful, to solve problems) or even a spiritual phenomenon. Participants' perspectives influenced their therapeutic approach: Those who saw experiences as purposeful were more likely to facilitate direct engagement with them and to support clients to explore potentially transformative aspects. However, this represented an extension of conventional approaches rather than being qualitatively different. More research is needed to clarify how widespread this approach is, to explore its utility, and to establish for whom and when it may be appropriate. |
Keywords | Transformative models; Clinical psychology; Clinical psychologists; Psychosis |
Year | 2020 |
Journal | Clinical Psychology & Psychotherapy |
Journal citation | 27 (1), pp. 87-96 |
Publisher | Wiley |
ISSN | 1063-3995 |
1099-0879 | |
Digital Object Identifier (DOI) | https://doi.org/10.1002/cpp.2411 |
Official URL | http://doi.org/10.1002/cpp.2411 |
Publication dates | |
Online | 27 Nov 2019 |
Publication process dates | |
Deposited | 29 Oct 2020 |
Accepted author manuscript | |
Output status | Published |
https://repository.canterbury.ac.uk/item/8w935/clinical-psychologists-use-of-transformative-models-of-psychosis
Download files
1256
total views479
total downloads7
views this month2
downloads this month
Export as
Related outputs
The 'Talking with Voices' approach: perspectives from voice hearers and their voices
Middleton, K. and Cooke, A. 2023. The 'Talking with Voices' approach: perspectives from voice hearers and their voices.“It allowed us to let our pain out”: perspectives from voice-hearers and their voices on the ‘talking with voices’ approach
Middleton, K., Cooke, Anne and May, Rufus 2022. “It allowed us to let our pain out”: perspectives from voice-hearers and their voices on the ‘talking with voices’ approach. Psychosis. https://doi.org/10.1080/17522439.2022.2141840Trapped in contradictions: professionals’ accounts of the concept of schizophrenia and its use in clinical practice
de Waal, Hanna, Boyle, Mary and Cooke, Anne 2022. Trapped in contradictions: professionals’ accounts of the concept of schizophrenia and its use in clinical practice. Psychosis. 15 (4), pp. 357-367. https://doi.org/10.1080/17522439.2022.2086607"I've lived that thing that we do with families": Understanding the experiences of practitioners' undertaking a three-year open dialogue UK training programme
Wates, A., Allen, J, Cooke, A and Holttum, S 2021. "I've lived that thing that we do with families": Understanding the experiences of practitioners' undertaking a three-year open dialogue UK training programme. Community Mental Health Journal. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10597-021-00885-8“My voices are just part of me, they don’t own me”: a qualitative investigation of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy groups for people experiencing psychosis
Bloy, Sally, Morris, E., Johns, Louise C., Cooke, Anne and Oliver, Joseph E. 2021. “My voices are just part of me, they don’t own me”: a qualitative investigation of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy groups for people experiencing psychosis. Psychosis. 13 (3), pp. 195-208. https://doi.org/10.1080/17522439.2020.1870542Coercion or collaboration: service-user experiences of risk management in hospital and a trauma-informed crisis house
Prytherch, Hannah, Cooke, Anne and Marsh, Ian 2020. Coercion or collaboration: service-user experiences of risk management in hospital and a trauma-informed crisis house. Psychosis. 13 (2), pp. 93-104. https://doi.org/10.1080/17522439.2020.1830155"The expert and the patient”: a discourse analysis of the house of commons’ debates regarding the 2007 Mental Health Act
Kent, T., Cooke, A. and Marsh, I. 2020. "The expert and the patient”: a discourse analysis of the house of commons’ debates regarding the 2007 Mental Health Act. Journal of Mental Health. 31 (2), pp. 153-157. https://doi.org/10.1080/09638237.2020.1818706Should clinical psychologists be political?
Rahim, M. and Cooke, A. 2019. Should clinical psychologists be political? in: Professional Issues in Clinical Psychology : Developing a Professional Identity Through Clinical Psychology Training and Beyond Abingdon, Oxon. Routledge.Stigma: a linguistic analysis of the UK red-top tabloids press’s representation of ‘schizophrenia’
Bowen, M., Kinderman, P. and Cooke, A. 2019. Stigma: a linguistic analysis of the UK red-top tabloids press’s representation of ‘schizophrenia’. Perspectives in Public Health. 139 (3), pp. 147-152. https://doi.org/10.1177/1757913919835858Conflict, compromise and collusion: dilemmas for psychosocially-oriented practitioners in the mental health system
Cooke, A., Smythe, W. and Anscombe, P. 2019. Conflict, compromise and collusion: dilemmas for psychosocially-oriented practitioners in the mental health system. Psychosis: Psychological, Social and Integrative Approaches. https://doi.org/10.1080/17522439.2019.1582687Where next for CBT and psychosis?
Cupitt, C. and Cooke, A. 2018. Where next for CBT and psychosis? in: Cupitt, C. (ed.) CBT for Psychosis: Process-oriented Therapies and the Third Wave Routledge. pp. 150-167Decolonising the curriculum - the final frontier: Assessment. Involving service users and carers in formal assessment processes
Lea, L. and Cooke, A. 2019. Decolonising the curriculum - the final frontier: Assessment. Involving service users and carers in formal assessment processes.Changing society's understanding of psychosis - A call to arms
Cooke, A. 2019. Changing society's understanding of psychosis - A call to arms.Real life experiences influence schizophrenia, says report
Cooke, A. 2014. Real life experiences influence schizophrenia, says report.
Changing society’s whole approach to psychosis (presentation)
Cooke, A. 2015. Changing society’s whole approach to psychosis (presentation).
Changing UK society’s whole approach to psychosis: articulating a genuinely psychosocial approach
Cooke, A. 2014. Changing UK society’s whole approach to psychosis: articulating a genuinely psychosocial approach.
Getting stuck in: clinical psychology programmes as provokers of professional and public debate
Cooke, A. 2013. Getting stuck in: clinical psychology programmes as provokers of professional and public debate.‘As public intellectuals, it is possible to be both polite and radical’ one on one with Anne Cooke
Cooke, A. 2017. ‘As public intellectuals, it is possible to be both polite and radical’ one on one with Anne Cooke. The Psychologist. 30, pp. 62-65.Training that domesticates or education that liberates? Tensions and dilemmas related to teaching critical psychology in the context of UK clinical psychology training. Training that domesticates or education that liberates? Tensions and dilemmas related to teaching critical psychology in the context of UK clinical psychology training
Cooke, A. 2017. Training that domesticates or education that liberates? Tensions and dilemmas related to teaching critical psychology in the context of UK clinical psychology training. Training that domesticates or education that liberates? Tensions and dilemmas related to teaching critical psychology in the context of UK clinical psychology training. in: Newnes, C. and Golding, L. (ed.) Teaching Critical Psychology: International Perspectives Routledge.The Brexit poll, part two
Cooke, A. 2016. The Brexit poll, part two. The Psychologist. 29.Taking a stand on social issues (letter)
Cooke, A. 2016. Taking a stand on social issues (letter). Psychologist. 29, pp. 400-409.Diagnostic cultures: a cultural approach to the pathologisation of modern life
Cooke, A. 2018. Diagnostic cultures: a cultural approach to the pathologisation of modern life. European Journal of Psychotherapy and Counselling. 20 (1), pp. 124-127. https://doi.org/10.1080/13642537.2018.1424603“It doesn’t mean I’m useless” How do young people experiencing psychosis contribute to their families and why are their contributions sometimes overlooked?
Allman, J., Cooke, A., Whitfield, B. and McCartney, M. 2017. “It doesn’t mean I’m useless” How do young people experiencing psychosis contribute to their families and why are their contributions sometimes overlooked? Psychosis: Psychological, Social and Integrative Approaches. https://doi.org/10.1080/17522439.2017.1413129Understanding psychosis and schizophrenia: the story and the future
Cooke, A. 2016. Understanding psychosis and schizophrenia: the story and the future.Changing the story: getting out there with psychosocial perspectives on ‘mental illness’
Cooke, A. 2015. Changing the story: getting out there with psychosocial perspectives on ‘mental illness’.Responses to the publication of the American Psychiatric Association’s DSM 5
Kinderman, P. and Cooke, A. 2017. Responses to the publication of the American Psychiatric Association’s DSM 5. Journal of Humanistic Psychology. 57 (6), pp. 625-649. https://doi.org/10.1177/0022167817698262
Understanding psychosis and schizophrenia: the story and the future
Cooke, A. and Kinderman, P. 2015. Understanding psychosis and schizophrenia: the story and the future.We desperately need #Equality4MentalHealth, but let’s have services people actually want to use
Cooke, A. 2015. We desperately need #Equality4MentalHealth, but let’s have services people actually want to use. Discursive of Tunbridge Wells.I’d rather die than go back to hospital’: why we need a non-medical crisis house in every town
Cooke, A. 2015. I’d rather die than go back to hospital’: why we need a non-medical crisis house in every town. Mad In America.Att Forsta Psyckos och Schizofreni
Cooke, A. and ISPS Swedem 2015. Att Forsta Psyckos och Schizofreni. Sweden ISPS Sweden/Dualis Publishing.Changing society’s whole approach to psychosis
Cooke, A. 2016. Changing society’s whole approach to psychosis. Journal of Mental Health. 25 (4), pp. 287-290. https://doi.org/10.3109/09638237.2016.1167861Panel debate - The future of the profession: Dreams and nightmares
Cooke, A. 2017. Panel debate - The future of the profession: Dreams and nightmares.“But what about real mental illnesses?” Alternatives to the disease model approach to ‘schizophrenia’
Cooke, A. and Kinderman, P. 2017. “But what about real mental illnesses?” Alternatives to the disease model approach to ‘schizophrenia’. Journal of Humanistic Psychology. 58 (1), pp. 47-71. https://doi.org/10.1177/0022167817745621They’re NICE and neat, but are they useful? A grounded theory of clinical psychologists’ beliefs about, and use of NICE guidelines
Court, A., Cooke, A. and Scrivener, A. 2016. They’re NICE and neat, but are they useful? A grounded theory of clinical psychologists’ beliefs about, and use of NICE guidelines. Clinical Psychology & Psychotherapy. https://doi.org/10.1002/cpp.2054Aims for service user involvement in mental health training: staying human
Lea, L., Holttum, S., Cooke, A. and Riley, L. 2016. Aims for service user involvement in mental health training: staying human. The Journal of Mental Health Training, Education and Practice. 11 (4), pp. 208-219. https://doi.org/10.1108/JMHTEP-01-2016-0008Robin Williams, depression and the complex causes of suicide
Cooke, A., Gilchrist, A. and McGowan, J. 2014. Robin Williams, depression and the complex causes of suicide. The Guardian.
Is life a disease?
Cooke, A. and McGowan, J. 2013. Is life a disease? Discursive of Tunbridge Wells.