Mental Health Psychoeducation
⚠️ CRITICAL DISCLAIMER
This skill provides educational information only. It is NOT:
- - Medical or psychiatric advice
- A substitute for professional diagnosis or treatment
- Crisis intervention (if you're in crisis, call 988 or your local emergency services)
- Therapy or counseling
This skill IS:
- - Educational content about mental health concepts
- Information about evidence-based techniques used in therapy
- Guidance on when and how to seek professional help
Always consult a licensed mental health professional for:
- - Diagnosis of any mental health condition
- Treatment planning
- Medication decisions
- Crisis situations
Overview
Mental health affects everyone. Understanding common conditions, how therapy works, and evidence-based coping strategies empowers you to make informed decisions about your care. This playbook covers foundational psychoeducation — what professionals know, translated for non-professionals.
Part 1: Understanding Common Mental Health Conditions
Anxiety Disorders
What it is:
Persistent, excessive worry or fear that interferes with daily life. Not just "feeling stressed" — anxiety disorders involve physiological symptoms and significant functional impairment.
Common types:
- - Generalized Anxiety Disorder (GAD): Chronic, excessive worry about multiple areas of life (work, health, relationships) for 6+ months
- Panic Disorder: Recurrent, unexpected panic attacks (sudden intense fear with physical symptoms: racing heart, sweating, shortness of breath)
- Social Anxiety Disorder: Intense fear of social situations or being judged by others
- Specific Phobias: Irrational fear of specific objects or situations (heights, flying, spiders, etc.)
Common symptoms:
- - Physical: Racing heart, sweating, trembling, shortness of breath, muscle tension, fatigue
- Cognitive: Excessive worry, catastrophic thinking, difficulty concentrating, mind going blank
- Behavioral: Avoidance of triggers, reassurance-seeking, procrastination
When to seek help:
- - Symptoms persist for weeks/months
- Interfering with work, relationships, or daily activities
- Causing significant distress
- Leading to substance use or other unhealthy coping
Depression (Major Depressive Disorder)
What it is:
Persistent low mood, loss of interest or pleasure, and other symptoms that last at least 2 weeks and interfere with functioning. Not the same as sadness or grief, which are normal responses to loss.
Core symptoms (need 5+ for diagnosis):
- - Depressed mood most of the day, nearly every day
- Loss of interest or pleasure in activities you used to enjoy
- Significant weight change or appetite change
- Insomnia or hypersomnia (sleeping too much)
- Psychomotor agitation or retardation (restlessness or slowness)
- Fatigue or loss of energy
- Feelings of worthlessness or excessive guilt
- Difficulty concentrating or making decisions
- Recurrent thoughts of death or suicidal ideation
When to seek help immediately:
- - Suicidal thoughts or self-harm urges → Call 988 (US) or local crisis line
- Inability to care for yourself (eating, hygiene, getting out of bed)
- Symptoms lasting 2+ weeks with no improvement
Important: Depression is highly treatable with therapy, medication, or both. It's a medical condition, not a character flaw.
ADHD (Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder)
What it is:
A neurodevelopmental disorder affecting attention, impulse control, and activity level. Present from childhood (though often diagnosed in adulthood). Not laziness or lack of discipline — it's differences in brain structure and neurotransmitter function.
Three presentations:
- 1. Inattentive: Difficulty sustaining attention, easily distracted, forgetful, loses things, struggles with organization
- Hyperactive-Impulsive: Fidgeting, restlessness, difficulty sitting still, interrupts others, impulsive decisions
- Combined: Both inattentive and hyperactive-impulsive symptoms
Common in adults (often missed in childhood):
- - Chronic disorganization and procrastination
- Time blindness (underestimating how long tasks take)
- Difficulty finishing projects
- Emotional dysregulation (quick to frustration or overwhelm)
- Hyperfocus on interesting tasks, inability to focus on boring ones
When to seek help:
- - Symptoms cause significant impairment at work, school, or relationships
- You suspect ADHD and want formal evaluation
- Executive function struggles (planning, organization, follow-through) are chronic
Treatment: Often includes medication (stimulants or non-stimulants) + behavioral strategies + coaching
Trauma and PTSD (Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder)
What it is:
PTSD develops after exposure to a traumatic event (actual or threatened death, serious injury, or sexual violence). Not everyone who experiences trauma develops PTSD.
Core symptom clusters:
- 1. Intrusion: Flashbacks, nightmares, intrusive memories of the trauma
- Avoidance: Avoiding reminders of the trauma (places, people, thoughts, feelings)
- Negative mood/cognition: Persistent negative beliefs ("I'm broken", "the world is dangerous"), emotional numbness, inability to feel positive emotions
- Hyperarousal: Hypervigilance, exaggerated startle response, irritability, difficulty sleeping, reckless behavior
When to seek help:
- - Symptoms last more than 1 month after trauma
- Interfering with daily functioning
- Experiencing dissociation or detachment from reality
Gold-standard treatments: Trauma-focused CBT, EMDR (Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing), Prolonged Exposure Therapy
OCD (Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder)
What it is:
Intrusive, unwanted thoughts (obsessions) that cause anxiety, leading to repetitive behaviors or mental rituals (compulsions) to reduce the anxiety. Not just "being neat" — OCD is debilitating.
Common obsession themes:
- - Contamination fears (germs, illness)
- Harm obsessions ("What if I hurt someone?")
- Symmetry/order obsessions
- Religious or moral obsessions (scrupulosity)
- Sexual or taboo thoughts (ego-dystonic — thoughts that go against your values)
Common compulsions:
- - Washing/cleaning rituals
- Checking (locks, appliances, making sure you didn't harm anyone)
- Counting, repeating actions
- Mental rituals (praying, counting, reassuring yourself)
- Reassurance-seeking
When to seek help:
- - Obsessions or compulsions take up 1+ hour per day
- Cause significant distress or interfere with functioning
Gold-standard treatment: ERP (Exposure and Response Prevention), a type of CBT specifically for OCD
Part 2: Therapy Modalities Explained
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT)
Core concept:
Thoughts, feelings, and behaviors are interconnected. By changing unhelpful thought patterns, you can change how you feel and behave.
How it works:
- 1. Identify automatic negative thoughts (ANTs)
- Challenge distorted thinking (cognitive distortions)
- Replace with more balanced, realistic thoughts
- Practice new behaviors that reinforce healthier thinking
Common techniques:
- - Thought records: Track situations → thoughts → feelings → behaviors
- Cognitive restructuring: Identify and challenge thinking errors (black-and-white thinking, catastrophizing, overgeneralization)
- Behavioral activation: Schedule positive activities to counter avoidance and depression
- Exposure therapy: Gradual exposure to feared situations (for anxiety, phobias, OCD)
Best for:
- - Anxiety disorders
- Depression
- OCD
- Panic disorder
- Phobias
Structure: Typically short-term (12-20 sessions), goal-oriented, homework between sessions
Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT)
Core concept:
Developed for borderline personality disorder, now used for emotion regulation struggles. Balances acceptance and change — you validate your feelings while also learning skills to manage them.
Four skill modules:
- 1. Mindfulness: Stay present, observe without judgment
- Distress Tolerance: Survive crises without making things worse (self-harm, substance use, impulsive actions)
- Emotion Regulation: Understand and manage intense emotions
- Interpersonal Effectiveness: Communicate needs, set boundaries, maintain relationships
Common techniques:
- - TIPP skills (Temperature, Intense exercise, Paced breathing, Paired muscle relaxation) for crisis moments
- Radical acceptance: Accept reality as it is, not as you wish it were
- DEAR MAN: Assertiveness script (Describe, Express, Assert, Reinforce, Mindful, Appear confident, Negotiate)
Best for:
- - Borderline personality disorder
- Chronic suicidal ideation or self-harm
- Intense emotional reactivity
- Relationship struggles
Structure: Weekly individual therapy + weekly skills group, typically 6-12 months
Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT)
Core concept:
Psychological flexibility — accept what's out of your control, commit to actions aligned with your values. Don't fight painful thoughts/feelings; make space for them while pursuing what matters.
Six core processes:
- 1. Acceptance: Allow uncomfortable thoughts/feelings without trying to change them
- Cognitive Defusion: Distance yourself from thoughts ("I'm having the thought that I'm worthless" vs "I AM worthless")
- Present moment awareness: Mindfulness
- Self-as-context: You are not your thoughts or feelings; you are the observer
- Values clarification: What matters most to you? What kind of life do you want?
- Committed action: Take action aligned with values, even when it's hard
Common techniques:
- - Values exercises: Identify what you care about deeply (relationships, growth, creativity, etc.)
- Defusion exercises: "Leaves on a stream" (visualize thoughts floating away), repeat a word until it loses meaning
- Willingness practice: Approach uncomfortable situations with openness rather than resistance
Best for:
- - Chronic pain
- Anxiety
- Depression
- Life transitions or existential struggles
Structure: Variable, often 12-20 sessions
Psychodynamic Therapy
Core concept:
Unconscious patterns from the past (especially early relationships) influence present thoughts, feelings, and behaviors. Insight into these patterns leads to change.
How it works:
- - Explore early life experiences, relationships with caregivers
- Identify recurring themes (e.g., always choosing unavailable partners, fear of abandonment)
- Understand how defense mechanisms protect you but also limit you
- Work through unresolved conflicts
Common techniques:
- - Free association: Say whatever comes to mind without filtering
- Dream analysis: Explore unconscious material
- Transference: Examine how you relate to the therapist (mirrors other relationships)
Best for:
- - Relationship patterns that keep repeating
- Identity or self-esteem issues
- Long-standing emotional struggles
- People who want deep self-understanding
Structure: Long-term (months to years), less structured than CBT
EMDR (Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing)
Core concept:
Traumatic memories get "stuck" in the brain and aren't processed properly. Bilateral stimulation (eye movements, tapping) helps reprocess these memories so they're less distressing.
How it works:
- 1. Identify target memory (traumatic event)
- Rate distress level (0-10)
- Identify negative belief about yourself related to trauma ("I'm powerless")
- Identify positive belief you'd prefer ("I'm strong now")
- Bilateral stimulation (follow therapist's fingers with your eyes, or alternating taps)
- Reprocess memory until distress decreases
Best for:
- - PTSD
- Trauma (single incident or complex)
- Phobias tied to specific events
Structure: 8-phase protocol, often 6-12 sessions for single-incident trauma
Part 3: Evidence-Based Coping Techniques
For Anxiety
Grounding Techniques (for panic or acute anxiety):
- - 5-4-3-2-1: Name 5 things you see, 4 you hear, 3 you can touch, 2 you smell, 1 you taste
- Box breathing: Inhale 4 counts, hold 4, exhale 4, hold 4, repeat
- Cold water: Splash face with cold water or hold ice cubes (activates dive reflex, calms nervous system)
Cognitive Techniques:
- - Worry time: Schedule 15 min/day to worry. Outside that time, postpone worries ("I'll think about this at 5pm")
- Decatastrophizing: Ask "What's the worst that could happen? How likely is it? Could I handle it?"
- Reframe: "I'm anxious" → "My body is preparing me to handle a challenge"
Behavioral Techniques:
- - Exposure hierarchy: List feared situations from least to most scary. Start with the easiest, work your way up.
- Opposite action: If anxiety says "avoid," approach instead (start small)
For Depression
Behavioral Activation:
- - Schedule 1-3 small activities daily that used to bring pleasure or a sense of accomplishment
- Start tiny: "Get out of bed", "Take a shower", "Walk around the block"
- Don't wait to feel motivated — action comes first, motivation follows
Cognitive Techniques:
- - Challenge all-or-nothing thinking: "I'm a total failure" → "I'm struggling in one area right now"
- Gratitude practice: List 3 things you're grateful for daily (even tiny things: "Coffee tasted good", "Sun was warm")
Social Connection:
- - Reach out to one person per day (text, call, or in-person)
- Join a group (hobby, support group, class) — social isolation worsens depression
Physical:
- - Exercise: Even 10-15 min of walking has antidepressant effects
- Sleep hygiene: Same bedtime/wake time, limit screens before bed, keep bedroom cool/dark
For ADHD
External Structure:
- - Time-blocking: Assign specific tasks to specific time blocks (use visual calendar)
- Timers: Work in 25-min sprints (Pomodoro), break after each
- Reduce friction: Prep the night before (lay out clothes, pack bag, prep breakfast)
Attention Management:
- - Body doubling: Work alongside someone else (in person or virtual)
- Minimize distractions: Phone in another room, use website blockers, noise-canceling headphones
- Task initiation hack: Just do the first step ("I'll just open the document" often leads to continuing)
Memory Aids:
- - Externalize everything: Don't rely on your brain to remember — calendars, lists, alarms, sticky notes
- Visual cues: Put things you need in your path (keys by the door, vitamins on the counter)
For Emotional Regulation (DBT Skills)
TIPP (crisis skills):
- - Temperature: Splash cold water on face, hold ice
- Intense exercise: 5-10 min of intense movement (jumping jacks, running, burpees)
- Paced breathing: Slow, deep breaths (exhale longer than inhale)
- Paired muscle relaxation: Tense and release muscle groups
Opposite Action:
- - If emotion urges one action, do the opposite
- Angry and want to yell? → Speak softly, take space
- Sad and want to isolate? → Reach out to someone
- Anxious and want to avoid? → Approach gradually
Ride the Wave:
- - Emotions are temporary — they rise, peak, and fall
- Don't act on the emotion at its peak
- Observe it, label it ("I'm feeling rage right now"), wait for it to crest
Part 4: Psychiatric Medications (How They Work)
Disclaimer: This is educational. Only a psychiatrist can prescribe medication. Never start, stop, or change medication without medical supervision.
Antidepressants
SSRIs (Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitors):
- - Examples: Prozac (fluoxetine), Zoloft (sertraline), Lexapro (escitalopram)
- How they work: Increase serotonin availability in the brain
- Used for: Depression, anxiety, OCD, PTSD
- Timeline: Takes 4-6 weeks to see full effect
- Side effects: Nausea, sexual dysfunction, sleep changes (usually improve after a few weeks)
SNRIs (Serotonin-Norepinephrine Reuptake Inhibitors):
- - Examples: Effexor (venlafaxine), Cymbalta (duloxetine)
- How they work: Increase serotonin AND norepinephrine
- Used for: Depression, anxiety, chronic pain
- Similar timeline and side effects to SSRIs
Atypical Antidepressants:
- - Examples: Wellbutrin (bupropion), Remeron (mirtazapine)
- Used for: Depression, especially when SSRIs don't work or have unwanted side effects
- Wellbutrin: Lower sexual side effects, can help with focus
- Remeron: Often helps with sleep and appetite
Anti-Anxiety Medications
Benzodiazepines (short-term use only):
- - Examples: Xanax (alprazolam), Ativan (lorazepam), Klonopin (clonazepam)
- How they work: Enhance GABA (calming neurotransmitter)
- Used for: Acute anxiety, panic attacks
- Risk: Highly addictive, tolerance builds quickly, dangerous to stop abruptly
- Typically used as a bridge while other treatments (therapy, SSRIs) take effect
Buspirone (non-addictive):
- - Used for: Generalized anxiety
- Takes 2-4 weeks to work
- No addiction risk, but less effective for panic
ADHD Medications
Stimulants:
- - Examples: Adderall (amphetamine), Ritalin/Concerta (methylphenidate), Vyvanse (lisdexamfetamine)
- How they work: Increase dopamine and norepinephrine (helps with focus, impulse control)
- Timeline: Works within 30-60 minutes
- Side effects: Decreased appetite, insomnia, increased heart rate
- Controlled substances — risk of misuse
Non-Stimulants:
- - Examples: Strattera (atomoxetine), Intuniv (guanfacine)
- Used for: ADHD when stimulants aren't tolerated or are contraindicated
- Timeline: Takes 4-6 weeks to work
- Fewer side effects, but often less effective than stimulants
Mood Stabilizers (for Bipolar Disorder)
Lithium:
- - Gold standard for bipolar disorder
- Requires regular blood monitoring (narrow therapeutic window)
Anticonvulsants:
- - Examples: Depakote (valproic acid), Lamictal (lamotrigine)
- Also used as mood stabilizers
Part 5: When to Seek Professional Help
Red Flags — Seek Help Immediately (Crisis)
- - Suicidal thoughts or plans → Call 988 (US) or local crisis line, go to ER
- Self-harm urges that feel uncontrollable → Crisis line or ER
- Psychotic symptoms (hallucinations, delusions, paranoia) → ER
- Inability to care for yourself (not eating, hygiene, leaving bed for days) → Call a trusted person, crisis line, or ER
Yellow Flags — Seek Help Soon (Non-Crisis)
- - Symptoms (anxiety, depression, mood swings) lasting 2+ weeks with no improvement
- Interfering with work, relationships, or daily functioning
- Using substances to cope
- Sleep severely disrupted (insomnia or sleeping all the time)
- Difficulty concentrating or making decisions
- Withdrawing from people or activities you used to enjoy
- Persistent feelings of hopelessness, worthlessness, or guilt
How to Find a Therapist
Step 1: Determine what you need
- - Therapy only? → Psychologist, therapist, counselor, social worker (LCSW, LMFT, etc.)
- Medication evaluation? → Psychiatrist (MD or DO who can prescribe)
- Both? → Psychiatrist for meds + therapist for talk therapy (common combo)
Step 2: Use these resources
- - Insurance directory: Call your insurance, ask for in-network providers
- Psychology Today therapist finder: Filter by location, insurance, specialty
- BetterHelp / Talkspace: Online therapy platforms (convenient, usually cheaper)
- Open Path Collective: Low-cost therapy ($30-80/session)
- Community mental health centers: Sliding scale fees based on income
Step 3: Screen potential therapists
- - Ask: "What's your approach or modality?" (CBT, DBT, psychodynamic, etc.)
- Ask: "Have you worked with [your issue] before?" (anxiety, trauma, ADHD, etc.)
- Ask: "What does a typical session look like?"
- Trust your gut — if it doesn't feel like a good fit after 2-3 sessions, it's okay to switch
Part 6: Self-Assessment Frameworks
These are NOT diagnostic tools. Only a licensed professional can diagnose. Use these to decide if you should seek evaluation.
Depression Screening (PHQ-9 concepts)
Over the past 2 weeks, how often have you experienced:
- 1. Little interest or pleasure in doing things
- Feeling down, depressed, or hopeless
- Trouble falling/staying asleep, or sleeping too much
- Feeling tired or having little energy
- Poor appetite or overeating
- Feeling bad about yourself or that you're a failure
- Trouble concentrating
- Moving or speaking slowly, or being restless
- Thoughts of self-harm
If you answered "more than half the days" or "nearly every day" to 5+ items → strongly consider seeking evaluation.
Anxiety Screening (GAD-7 concepts)
Over the past 2 weeks, how often have you experienced:
- 1. Feeling nervous, anxious, or on edge
- Not being able to stop or control worrying
- Worrying too much about different things
- Trouble relaxing
- Being so restless it's hard to sit still
- Becoming easily annoyed or irritable
- Feeling afraid something awful might happen
If you answered "more than half the days" or "nearly every day" to 4+ items → consider seeking evaluation.
ADHD Screening (Adult ADHD Self-Report Scale concepts)
How often do you:
- 1. Have trouble finishing tasks once the interesting parts are done
- Have difficulty getting things in order for tasks requiring organization
- Have problems remembering appointments or obligations
- Avoid or delay starting tasks that require a lot of thought
- Fidget or squirm when sitting for a long time
- Feel overly active or compelled to do things (like driven by a motor)
If you answered "often" or "very often" to 4+ items → consider seeking ADHD evaluation.
Mental Health Psychoeducation — Key Takeaways
- 1. Mental health conditions are medical conditions — not character flaws, not weakness, not your fault
- Treatment works — therapy, medication, or both are highly effective for most conditions
- You don't have to hit rock bottom to seek help — early intervention prevents worsening
- Finding the right fit matters — if the first therapist or medication doesn't work, try another
- Self-help is a supplement, not a replacement — coping skills are valuable, but they don't replace professional care when it's needed
If you take one thing from this: Mental health struggles are common, treatable, and nothing to be ashamed of. Seeking help is a sign of strength, not weakness.
Resources
Crisis Support:
- - 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline (US) — call or text 988
- Crisis Text Line — text HOME to 741741
- International Association for Suicide Prevention: https://www.iasp.info/resources/Crisis_Centres/
Find a Therapist:
- - Psychology Today: https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/therapists
- BetterHelp: https://www.betterhelp.com
- Open Path Collective: https://openpathcollective.org
Educational Resources:
- - National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI): https://www.nami.org
- Anxiety & Depression Association of America (ADAA): https://adaa.org
- DBT Skills Training Manual (Marsha Linehan)
- Feeling Good (David Burns) — CBT self-help book
心理健康心理教育
⚠️ 重要免责声明
本技能仅提供教育信息。它并非:
- - 医疗或精神科建议
- 专业诊断或治疗的替代品
- 危机干预(如果您处于危机中,请拨打988或当地紧急服务)
- 治疗或咨询
本技能是:
- - 关于心理健康概念的教育内容
- 关于治疗中使用的循证技术的信息
- 关于何时以及如何寻求专业帮助的指导
请务必咨询持证心理健康专业人士以获取:
- - 任何心理健康状况的诊断
- 治疗计划
- 用药决策
- 危机情况
概述
心理健康影响着每个人。了解常见状况、治疗原理以及循证应对策略,能让您为自己的护理做出明智决策。本指南涵盖基础心理教育——专业人士所掌握的知识,以非专业人士能理解的方式呈现。
第一部分:了解常见心理健康状况
焦虑障碍
定义:
持续、过度的担忧或恐惧,干扰日常生活。不仅仅是感到压力——焦虑障碍涉及生理症状和显著的功能损害。
常见类型:
- - 广泛性焦虑障碍: 对生活多个方面(工作、健康、人际关系)持续6个月以上的慢性、过度担忧
- 惊恐障碍: 反复、突发的惊恐发作(突然的强烈恐惧伴随生理症状:心跳加速、出汗、呼吸急促)
- 社交焦虑障碍: 对社交场合或被他人评判的强烈恐惧
- 特定恐惧症: 对特定物体或情境的非理性恐惧(高处、飞行、蜘蛛等)
常见症状:
- - 生理:心跳加速、出汗、颤抖、呼吸急促、肌肉紧张、疲劳
- 认知:过度担忧、灾难化思维、注意力难以集中、大脑空白
- 行为:回避触发因素、寻求 reassurance、拖延
何时寻求帮助:
- - 症状持续数周/数月
- 干扰工作、人际关系或日常活动
- 造成显著痛苦
- 导致物质使用或其他不健康的应对方式
抑郁症(重度抑郁障碍)
定义:
持续的情绪低落、兴趣或愉悦感丧失,以及其他症状,持续至少2周并干扰功能。不同于悲伤或哀伤,后者是对失落的正常反应。
核心症状(诊断需满足5项以上):
- - 几乎每天大部分时间情绪低落
- 对曾经喜欢的活动失去兴趣或愉悦感
- 显著的体重变化或食欲改变
- 失眠或嗜睡(睡眠过多)
- 精神运动性激越或迟滞(坐立不安或行动迟缓)
- 疲劳或精力丧失
- 无价值感或过度内疚
- 注意力难以集中或做决定
- 反复出现死亡念头或自杀意念
何时立即寻求帮助:
- - 自杀念头或自伤冲动 → 拨打988(美国)或当地危机热线
- 无法照顾自己(进食、卫生、起床)
- 症状持续2周以上无改善
重要提示: 抑郁症通过治疗、药物或两者结合,治愈率很高。这是一种医学状况,而非性格缺陷。
注意缺陷/多动障碍
定义:
一种影响注意力、冲动控制和活动水平的神经发育障碍。从儿童期即存在(尽管常在成年期才被诊断)。不是懒惰或缺乏纪律——而是大脑结构和神经递质功能的差异。
三种表现类型:
- 1. 注意力不集中型: 难以维持注意力、容易分心、健忘、丢东西、组织能力差
- 多动-冲动型: 坐立不安、难以静坐、打断他人、冲动决策
- 混合型: 同时存在注意力不集中和多动-冲动症状
成人常见表现(常被儿童期漏诊):
- - 长期的组织混乱和拖延
- 时间盲(低估任务所需时间)
- 难以完成项目
- 情绪失调(容易沮丧或不堪重负)
- 对有趣任务过度专注,对枯燥任务无法集中
何时寻求帮助:
- - 症状在工作、学校或人际关系中造成显著损害
- 怀疑自己患有多动症并希望正式评估
- 执行功能困难(计划、组织、跟进)长期存在
治疗: 通常包括药物(兴奋剂或非兴奋剂)+ 行为策略 + 辅导
创伤与创伤后应激障碍
定义:
创伤后应激障碍在经历创伤事件(实际或威胁性的死亡、严重伤害或性暴力)后发展而来。并非所有经历创伤的人都会发展成创伤后应激障碍。
核心症状群:
- 1. 侵入性症状: 闪回、噩梦、创伤的侵入性记忆
- 回避: 回避创伤的提醒物(地点、人、想法、感受)
- 负面情绪/认知: 持续的负面信念(我毁了、世界很危险)、情感麻木、无法感受积极情绪
- 过度警觉: 高度警觉、惊跳反应增强、易怒、睡眠困难、鲁莽行为
何时寻求帮助:
- - 创伤后症状持续超过1个月
- 干扰日常功能
- 经历解离或与现实脱离
黄金标准治疗: 创伤聚焦认知行为疗法、眼动脱敏与再加工、延长暴露疗法
强迫症
定义:
侵入性、不想要的念头(强迫思维)引起焦虑,导致重复行为或心理仪式(强迫行为)来减轻焦虑。不仅仅是爱整洁——强迫症是令人衰弱的。
常见强迫思维主题:
- - 污染恐惧(细菌、疾病)
- 伤害性强迫思维(如果我伤害了别人怎么办?)
- 对称/秩序强迫思维
- 宗教或道德强迫思维(过度良心不安)
- 性禁忌或禁忌想法(自我失调——违背你价值观的想法)
常见强迫行为:
- - 清洗/清洁仪式
- 检查(门锁、电器、确认没有伤害他人)
- 计数、重复动作
- 心理仪式(祈祷、计数、自我安慰)
- 寻求 reassurance
何时寻求帮助:
- - 强迫思维或强迫行为每天占用1小时以上
- 造成显著痛苦或干扰功能
黄金标准治疗: 暴露与反应预防,一种专门针对强迫症的认知行为疗法
第二部分:治疗模式解析
认知行为疗法
核心概念:
想法、感受和行为相互关联。通过改变无益的思维模式,可以改变感受和行为方式。
工作原理:
- 1. 识别自动负面思维
- 挑战扭曲的思维(认知扭曲)
- 用更平衡、现实的想法替代
- 实践强化更健康思维的新行为
常用技术:
- - 思维记录: 追踪情境 → 想法 → 感受 → 行为
- 认知重构: 识别并挑战思维错误(非黑即白思维、灾难化、过度概括)
- 行为激活: 安排积极活动以对抗回避和抑郁
- 暴露疗法: 逐步暴露于恐惧情境(用于焦虑、恐惧症、强迫症)
最适合:
结构: 通常短期(12-20次),目标导向,两次治疗间有家庭作业
辩证行为疗法
核心概念:
最初为边缘型人格障碍开发,现用于情绪调节困难。平衡接纳与改变——既认可自己的感受,同时学习管理感受的技能。
四个技能模块:
- 1. 正念: 保持当下,不加评判地观察
- 痛苦耐受: 在不使情况恶化(自伤、物质使用、冲动行为)的情况下度过危机
- 情绪调节: 理解和管理强烈情绪
- 人际效能: 沟通需求、设定边界、维持关系
常用技术:
- - TIPP技能(温度、剧烈运动、节奏呼吸、配对肌肉放松)用于危机时刻
- 彻底接纳: 接纳现实的本来面目,而非你希望的样子
- DEAR MAN: 自信表达脚本(描述、表达、坚持、强化、正念、显得自信、协商)
最适合:
- - 边缘型人格障碍
- 慢性自杀意念或自伤
- 强烈情绪反应
- 人际关系困难
结构: 每周个体治疗 + 每周技能团体,通常6-12个月
接纳与承诺疗法
核心概念:
心理灵活性——接纳无法控制的事物,承诺采取与价值观一致的行动。不与痛苦的想法/感受抗争;为它们留出空间,同时追求重要的事情。
六个核心过程:
- 1. 接纳: 允许不舒服的想法/感受存在,而不试图改变它们
- 认知解离: 与想法保持距离(我有自己毫无价值的想法 vs 我毫无价值)
- 当下意识: 正念
- 作为背景的自我: 你不是你的想法或感受;你是观察者
- 价值观澄清: 什么对你最重要?你想要什么样的生活?
- 承诺行动: 采取与价值观一致的行动,即使困难
常用技术: