9 results on '"Zalzala, Aieyat B."'
Search Results
2. Navigating an Impasse in the Psychotherapy for Psychosis
- Author
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Ridenour, Jeremy M., Hamm, Jay A., Neal, David W., Hillis, Jaclyn D., Gagen, Emily C., Zalzala, Aieyat B., and Lysaker, Paul H.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Navigating an Impasse in the Psychotherapy for Psychosis.
- Author
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Ridenour, Jeremy M., Hamm, Jay A., Neal, David W., Hillis, Jaclyn D., Gagen, Emily C., Zalzala, Aieyat B., and Lysaker, Paul H.
- Subjects
EMPATHY ,PSYCHOSES ,CONVALESCENCE ,CLIENT relations ,PSYCHOLOGICAL vulnerability ,SOCIAL stigma ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,INTERPERSONAL relations ,TERMINATION of treatment ,PSYCHOTHERAPY ,THERAPEUTIC alliance - Abstract
Despite pessimism in the field, persons experiencing psychosis can benefit from psychotherapy and recover. However, there are multiple factors that can interfere with the formation of a positive therapeutic alliance and lead to the premature termination of therapy, which is associated with poorer long-term outcomes. In this article, common therapist, patient, and intersubjective factors are identified that can inhibit personal growth and lead to stalled treatments. After reviewing these various roadblocks, four principles (e.g., an intersubjective orientation to realty, therapeutic openheartedness/vulnerability, "speaking the unspeakable", and recognizing the pain beyond the psychosis) are outlined that can embolden the therapist to take judicious risks while avoiding common pitfalls when working with persons experiencing psychosis. These principles also enable the therapist to maintain an empathic connection to the patient and appreciate the pain beyond the psychotic symptom. The clinical implications and challenges of embodying these principles and implementing these interventions are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. La reflexión y la recuperación de la psicosis durante el COVID-19: adaptación en la psicoterapia de EE UU
- Author
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Lysaker, Paul H., Hillis, Jaclyn D., Zalzala, Aieyat B., and Gagen, Emily C.
- Subjects
Psychotherapy ,Metacognición ,Intersubjectivity ,Pandemia ,Pandemic ,Recovery ,Psicoterapia ,COVID-19 ,Intersubjetividad ,Psicosis ,Recuperación ,Psychosis ,Metacognition - Abstract
In response to the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic several adaptations have allowed us to continue to provide one form of recovery-oriented psychotherapy to persons with psychosis: Metacognitive Insight and Reflection Therapy (MERIT). These successful adaptations have included the incorporation of patients' experience of the pandemic and the exploration of challenges from temporary changes in therapy platforms to deepen reflections about patients' self-experience, their experience of intersubjectivity and their own agentic responses to psychosocial challenges. RESUMEN En respuesta a la pandemia del coronavirus (COVID-19) varias adaptaciones han permitido que sigamos facilitando una de las formas de psicoterapia orientada a la recuperación de las personas que padecen psicosis: la terapia de percepción metacognitiva y reflexión (MERIT). Estas adaptaciones satisfactorias incluyen la incorporación de la experiencia de los pacientes de la pandemia y el uso de los desafíos que plantean los cambios temporales en las plataformas terapéuticas con objeto de profundizar en la reflexión sobre la autoexperiencia de los pacientes, su experiencia en intersubjetividad y sus propias respuestas a los desafíos psicosociales.
- Published
- 2020
5. How psychosis interrupts the lives of women and men differently: a qualitative comparison.
- Author
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Firmin, Ruth L., Zalzala, Aieyat B., Hamm, Jay A., Luther, Lauren, and Lysaker, Paul H.
- Subjects
- *
MEN'S health , *PSYCHOSES , *AGE distribution , *RESEARCH methodology , *RACE , *INTERVIEWING , *SOCIAL stigma , *SEX distribution , *QUALITATIVE research , *COMPARATIVE studies , *INTERPERSONAL relations , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *CLASSIFICATION of mental disorders , *THEMATIC analysis , *WOMEN'S health , *EDUCATIONAL attainment - Abstract
Purpose: Psychosis disrupts how persons experience themselves and their lives. Despite knowledge that gender differences have been noted in presentation and course of psychosis symptoms, little is known about differences in how men and women experience these disruptions. Method: The narratives of 26 men and 27 women diagnosed with psychosis, matched on age, education, and race, of the impact of psychosis on one's life, were compared. Using secondary data from semi‐structured interviews, themes were identified using inductive, phenomenological qualitative analyses. Results: Women and men discussed psychosis‐related interruptions to the roles and relationships that shape their identity. Both genders discussed the impact of psychosis on their sense of self, work, and relationships. Nuanced gender differences emerged, informing unique areas of challenge related to (1) parenting and loss of parenting roles, (2) work and loss or changes in work trajectories, (3) isolation and strain on interpersonal relationships, and (4) manifestations of stigma. Conclusions: Psychosis may disrupt distinct aspects of life for men and women. Each gender faces the intersection of socially informed expectations that impact one's experiences of stigma, expectations of others, and manifestations of losses felt in one's role and sense of identity. Findings inform important considerations for therapy and other services. Practitioner points: Gender‐based socialized expectations, losses, and challenges that accompany psychosis are important areas for therapeutic consideration.Current treatments may neglect challenges that are more commonly experienced by women with psychosis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Reflection and Recovery from Psychosis during the Time of COVID-19: Adaptation in Psychotherapy in the United States.
- Author
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Lysaker, Paul H., Hillis, Jaclyn D., Zalzala, Aieyat B., and Gagen, Emily C.
- Subjects
CORONAVIRUS diseases ,PANDEMICS ,PSYCHOTHERAPY ,PSYCHOSOCIAL factors ,PSYCHOSES - Abstract
Copyright of Clinica y Salud is the property of Colegio Oficial de Psicologos de Madrid and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. A Disorder by Any Other Name: Metacognition, Schizophrenia, and Diagnostic Practice.
- Author
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Lysaker, Paul H., Zalzala, Aieyat B., Ladegaard, Nicolai, Buck, Benjamin, Leonhardt, Bethany L., and Hamm, Jay A.
- Subjects
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SCHIZOPHRENIA , *METACOGNITION , *MENTAL health , *PATIENT acceptance of health care , *NURSING assessment - Abstract
Humanistic psychology has made us aware that any understanding of schizophrenia must see persons diagnosed with this condition as whole persons who are making sense of what wellness and recovery mean to them. This has raised questions about what the diagnosis of schizophrenia means and whether the diagnostic label of schizophrenia is helpful when we try to conceptualize the actions and aims of treatment. To examine this issue we propose it is essential to consider what is systematically occuring psychologicaly in recovery when persons experience, interpret and agentically respond to emerging challenges. We then review how the integrated model of metacognition provides a systematic, person-centered, evidence-based approach to understanding psychological processes which impact recovery, and discuss how this guides a form of psychotherapy, metacognitive reflection and insight therapy, which promotes metacognitive abilities and support recovery. We suggest this work indicates that metacognitive capacity is something that can be diagnosed without stigmatizing persons. It can be used to meaningfully inform clinical practice across various theoretical models and offers concrete implications for rehabilitation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Metacognitive deficits and social functioning in schizophrenia across symptom profiles: A latent class analysis.
- Author
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Gagen, Emily C., Zalzala, Aieyat B., Hochheiser, Jesse, Schnakenberg Martin, Ashley, and Lysaker, Paul H.
- Subjects
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SOCIAL skills , *SCHIZOPHRENIA , *SYMPTOMS , *ADULTS - Abstract
Functional deficits are a hallmark of schizophrenia spectrum disorders, but much debate still exists over why and how they originate. One model suggests that disturbances in social functioning are a result of metacognitive deficits or a failure to integrate information to form more complex ideas of themselves and others. It is unclear if this social dysfunction is present across different symptom presentations.We examined the relationship of metacognition, symptoms, and social functioning among a sample of adults with schizophrenia spectrum disorders (N ¼ 334). A latent class analysis produced a four-class model. Groups were classified as follows: diffuse symptoms/moderately impaired social functioning (Class 1), positive and hostility symptoms/mildly impaired social functioning (Class 2), minimal symptoms/good social functioning (Class 3), and negative and cognitive symptoms/severely impaired social functioning (Class 4). Class 3 demonstrated better overall metacognitive capacity than both Classes 1 and 4 but did not differ significantly from Class 2. Classes 2 and 3 both demonstrated better interpersonal functioning than Classes 1 and 4. Together, these findings provide support for models of poor functioning that stem from fragmentation of an individual's experience, leading to diminished abilities to form meaningful connections with others. Additional interpretations, limitations, and research implications are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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9. Meaning, integration, and the self in serious mental illness: Implications of research in metacognition for psychiatric rehabilitation.
- Author
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Lysaker PH, Kukla M, Leonhardt BL, Hamm JA, Schnakenberg Martin A, Zalzala AB, Gagen EC, and Hasson-Ohayon I
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- Humans, Mental Disorders physiopathology, Mental Disorders rehabilitation, Metacognition physiology, Psychiatric Rehabilitation methods, Self Concept
- Abstract
Objective: It has been established that recovery is a common outcome for adults diagnosed with serious mental illness which involves objective and subjective phenomenon. While considerable work has examined objective aspects of recovery, it remains difficult to know how to quantify the processes which support more subjective aspects of recovery related to sense of self. This article explores the potential of recent research on metacognition to offer new avenues to measure the processes which make a sense of self available within the flow of life., Method: Emerging definitions of metacognition using an integrative model of metacognition are reviewed. Research is presented suggesting adults diagnosed with serious mental illness are often confronted by metacognitive deficits which interfere with their ability to make sense of their psychiatric challenges and effectively direct their own recovery., Findings: Metacognitive capacity may be a quantifiable phenomenon which contributes to certain aspects of recovery related to meaning making, agency and self-direction., Conclusions and Implications for Practice: Promoting metacognitive capacity may be a previously unrecognized active element of existing rehabilitative interventions. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2020 APA, all rights reserved).
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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