Behavioral Treatments

The central nervous system is the source of all behaviors and emotions; it also mediates the individual's relationship with the environment. Consequently, when the central nervous system is disrupted by neurologic disease, there are frequently many concomitant emotional and behavioral disturban...

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Veröffentlicht in:Current treatment options in neurology 2002-11, Vol.4 (6), p.499-504
Hauptverfasser: Tucker, Gary J., Stuart, Richard B.
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The central nervous system is the source of all behaviors and emotions; it also mediates the individual's relationship with the environment. Consequently, when the central nervous system is disrupted by neurologic disease, there are frequently many concomitant emotional and behavioral disturbances, as well as conflicts with the environment and the people surrounding the patient. Patients are often unaware that these maladaptive interactions often determine the nature and quality of care that they receive from their caregivers. The aggressive or wandering brain-damaged patient often ends up in a secure facility, and the apathetic patient often becomes forgotten. Although psychopharmacologic agents can moderate some of the behavioral and emotional symptoms of brain damage, these medications have side effects such as sedation and falls, among others, and they often interfere with the metabolism of medications that patients are already taking. Behavior therapy is an excellent supplement to, if not alternative for, medications to control symptomatic behaviors associated with brain damage for the following reasons: 1) behavioral treatment is nonpharmacologic, and, therefore, there are no drug interactions or side effects in patients with neurologic illnesses; 2) behavioral treatments can be designed to treat specific symptoms, and, by mitigating them, improve the quality of life of the patient and the caregivers; 3) the success of behavioral treatments can usually be quantified as the target behaviors are pinpointed and measured before, during, and after the behavioral interventions; 4) behavioral treatments are usually cost effective, because they can be devised by psychologists, but administered by direct daily caregivers and family members; and 5) behavioral treatments administered by caregivers give the caregivers a sense of participation and control of the treatment. Reports of the effectiveness of behavioral treatments support their inclusion as an important complementary component in the care of individuals with neurologic disorders as well as the milieu of institutions that care for the brain damaged.
ISSN:1092-8480
1534-3138
DOI:10.1007/s11940-002-0017-1