BABCP ANNUAL CONFERENCE BRISTOL 14 - 17 JULY 1999 Thursday 15th July 1999 - Morning Sessions 9.00 - 11.30
9.00
Introduction 9.05
Like Some Other Methods, Exposure is Sufficient but not Essential for Fear Reduction 9.35
Emotional Processing and the Transformation of Meaning in Post-Traumatic Stress 10.05 Coffee 10.30 The Future
of Exposure 11.00 A Final
Common Pathway: Changes in Meaning are Responsible for the
9.00
Rumination and Generalisation in
Depression: Theory ands Research 9.30
A Comparison of Depressive Rumination and Anxious Worry 10.00 Coffee 10.30
Psychological Processes in Bipolar Patients 11.00 Do
Clients with Bipolar Disorders Demonstrate Depressive Thinking?
9.00 The Role of Shame
in Psychopathology 9.30 The Role of Shame in
Chronic and Entrenched PTSD 10.00 Shame and Disclosure 10.30 Coffee 10.50 Shame in the Internal Relationship 11.20 Discussant: Chris Brewin: University College London
9.00
Training Standards 9.30
Supervision 9.50
Continuing Professional Development 10.15 Coffee 10.30 The Royal College
of Psychiatry Route 10.45 The British
Psychological Society Route 11.10 The United
Kingdom Council for Psychotherapys Role 11.25 Discussion Mini-Workshop 1 Cancelled Thursday 15th July 1999 Keynote Addresses 12.00 - 13.00 Are Behavioural and Cognitive Therapies Professor Isaac Marks, Chair: Dr David Richards, Chair of BABCP Shame: The Good, the Bad and the Ugly" Professor Paul Gilbert, Chair: Professor Chris Brewin, University College London Thursday 15th July 1999 - Afternoon Sessions 14.00 - 16.45
14.00
A Cognitive Approach to Auditory
Hallucinations 14.30 Does
Anxiety have a Role in the Maintenance of Persecutory Delusions? 15.00 Tea 15.30
Self-Discrepancies, Attributional Stability and Family Relations in Paranoia: Expanding
the Model 16.00
Discussant
14.00
"Hypochondriasis':Health Anxiety and Beyond 14.30 Thinking About
Illness and Health 15.00 Coffee 15.30 Title to be
announced 16.00 Title to be
announced 16.30 Discussant
14.00
BTSTEPS: Results of a Multicenter RCT of Computer-aided Care in 200 OCD Patients. 14.20 Evaluation
of a Self-Help Room in a General Adult Psychiatry Service 14.40 Self-help
Treatment of Chronic Fatigue in the Community: A Randomised Controlled Trial 15.00 Tea 15.30 Self Help
in Bulimia: Recruitment Problems in an Open Study of a Computer-Based CBT Package 15.50 Computer
Aided Therapy for Phobias - The Development and Function of the Maudsley Self Care Clinic.
16.10 Postal
Self-exposure Treatment of Recurrent Nightmares 16.30 Discussion
14.00 Images and
Memories in Posttraumatic Stress Disorder, and in Other Axis I Disorders. 14.25 Images and
Obsessions 14.50 Imagery of Worst
Panic Attacks 15.15 Tea 15.35 Posttraumatic
Intrusions in Victims of Violence 16.00 The Role of
Movement Information in Traumatic Imagery 16.25 Effects of Mode
of Writing on Generating Traumatic Imagery
14.00
Introduction 14.10 Cognitive
Preparation Enhances the Benefits of Video Feedback after a Stressful Social Performance 14.35
Modifications of Self-Consciousness during Feared Social Encounters 15.00 Tea 15.30
Implementing a New Cognitive Treatment for Social Phobia 15.55 Brief
Cognitive Therapy for Social Phobia 16.20 Discussion
14.00 An
Examination of Psychological Health Related Behaviour: Coping, Mood, Affect Regulation and
Problem Solving 14.25 Autobiographical Memory in
Posttraumatic Stress Disorder: 14.50 Is it Necessary to Revisit
Trauma While Treating Traumatophobia? 13.15 Tea 13.35 Dialectical Behaviour Therapy
with Eating Disorders 14.00 Cognitive Behaviour Therapy
Approaches to Disputing Automatic Thoughts: A Two-Stage Model Mini-Workshop 2 Formulating and Treating Shame, Humiliation and Guilt in Chronic Post Traumatic Stress Disorder: A Cognitive-Behavioural Approach. Deborah Lee, The Trauma Clinic, London and Mini-Workshop 3 Chronic Pain Frances Cole, General Practitioner and Mini-Workshop 4 Anger Treatment with Difficult Patients Raymond W Novaco, University of California, Irvine, USA Thursday 15th July 1999 Keynote Addresses 17.00 - 18.00 Is There a Role for Cognitive Therapy in the Treatment of Bipolar Disorder? Professor Jan Scott Chair: Dr Gill Haddock, BABCP President-Elect 'I'm a Doctor, Trust Me': Why Reassurance is Not Always the Best Way to Help People Worried About Their Health Dr Paul Salkovskis Chair: Dr David Veale, Groveland Priory Hospital, London Friday 16th July 1999 Morning Sessions 9.00 - 11.30
9.00
Introduction 9.05
Manualised Cognitive Therapy for Repeat Parasuicide 9.35
Everything I Know About Depression I Learnt From IVY 10.05 How Does
Cognitive Therapy for Residual Depressive Chronicity Reduce Relapse? 10.35 "If You
Listen to your Heart You Will Change Your Mind": In the Light of Teasdale's 11.00 to be
announced
9.00 Introduction 9.10 Psychopathology
and Personal Agency: Modernity, Culture Change and Eating Disorders 9.35 The Role of Control:
What Do Patients Themselves Think is Good and Bad About Anorexia Nervosa 10.00 Coffee 10.15 A New Cognitive Behavioural
Theory of Anorexia Nervosa 10.40 Submission, Serotonin and
Control: An Integrated Neurodevelopmental Model of Anorexia Nervosa 11.05 Discussant:
9.00 CBT for
Psychosis and Associated Substance Use Problems 9.30 Staff - patient
Relationships on a Low Secure Unit: An Exploratory Study 10.00 Coffee 10.20 Reactance and Treatment
Concordance in Schizophrenia 10.50 The Engagement of Anger in
Psychoses and the Treatment Engagement of Angry Psychotic Patients 11.20 Discussion
9.00
Impaired Positive Inferential Bias in Social Phobia. 9.25 Anticipatory
Processing in Social Anxiety. 9.50 Attention
between Internal and External Cues in Social Anxiety: Investigation Using a Novel Paradigm 10.15 Coffee 10.40 The Prediction of PTSD
in Road-Accident Survivors: The Role of Initial Symptoms, Beliefs and Coping Strategies. 11.05 Counterfactual
Reasoning in Trauma Survivors.
9.00 Introduction 9.10 "And Are You Sexually
Interested in Children?" A Computer Assisted Approach to Enabling and 9.40 Cognitive Treatment for
Learning Disabled Sex Offenders 10.10 Outcome Evaluation of 161
People with Mild Learning Disabilities in Tayside who 10.40 Why Target Anger for
Treatment Among Offenders with Learning Disabilities? 11.10 Neuropsychiatric
Disorders - Obstacles to Effective Working with Learning Disabled Offenders? 11.40 Discussion Mini-Workshop 5 Developing Brief Focused Cognitive Behavioural Group Treatments for Adolescents with Specific Clinical Presentations Anne Aubin. Exeter Child Adolescent and
Family Consultation Service; and Mini-Workshop 6 Getting Ground Down with 'Got To" Peter Tyler, Chester Mini-Workshop 7 Working with Images and Memories in Cognitive Therapy for PTSD Ann Hackman. Warneford Hospital, Oxford Friday 16th July 1999 Keynote Addresses 12.00 - 13.00 Cognitive Therapy of Depression: The State of the Art Professor Ivy Blackburn Chair: Dr Paul Salkovskis, University of Oxford Learning and Memory Processes in Return of Fear Professor Michelle Craske Chair: Dr Roz Shafran, University of Oxford Friday 16th July 1999 Afternoon Sessions 14.00 - 16.45
14.00 Title to be
announced 14.30 A Cognitive
Therapy Conceptualization of Distress in Dementia 15.00 If Depression is
the Common Cold of Psychiatry, What Hope of Delivering Effective Treatment? 15.15 Tea 15.35 If Depression is
the Common Cold of Psychiatry, What Hope of Delivering Effective Treatment? (continued) 16.15 Depression and
Low Self-esteem: A Clinical Puzzle. 16.40 Closing Remarks
14.00 Partners'
Expressed Emotion and Glucose Control in Adults with Type 1 Diabetes? 14.25 Development of a
Cognitive Behavioural Therapy Programme for People with Sickle Cell Disease 14.50 PRISM : A Novel
Brief Visual Method to Assess Global Impact of Illness 15.15 Tea 15.35 Is Cognitive
Behavioural Therapy Appropriate for all Patients with Chronic Idiopathic Facial Pain? 16.00 A Prospective
Investigation of Symptoms of Post-Traumatic Stress, Anxiety and Depression 16.25 Discussion
14.00
Cognitive-Behaviour Therapy Supervision: Evidence Based? 14.25 Collaborative
Empiricism in the Process of CBT Training 14.50 What is the Point
of Cognitive Behaviour Therapy Training? A Preliminary Investigation to Measure Change 15.15 Tea 15.35 Practising
Cognitive Therapy Techniques on Oneself: The Role of Self-practice and Self-reflection 16.00 Implementation of
Clinical Skills: Implications for Training Professionals
14.00 The Interpretation of
Intrusions in Psychosis 14.30 Intrusive Cognitions in
Nocturnal Panic 15.00 Tea 15.30 Intrusions in PTSD 16.00 Modifying Meaning: Patterns
of Change During the Treatment of Obsessive Thoughts 16.30 Discussion
14.00 The Challenge of
Physical Treatments 14.30 The Systemic Approach
in the Understanding and Treatment of Sexual Problems 15.00 Tea 15.30 Sex Therapy in an Asian
Country: The Sri Lankan Experience 15.00 Ethical Issues in Sex
Therapy Open Papers Children and Other Issues Chair to be announced 14.00 A
Comparison of a Structured Behavioural Parent Training Intervention with Standard
Treatment of 14.30
"Winning Friends and Beating Enemies": A Cognitive Behavioural Therapeutic
Workshop Series for a 15.00 Tea 15.30 Cognitive
Behavioural Therapy for Panic Disorder in Primary Care 16.00 Coping
Enhancement for Voices and Delusions: Piloting Routine Implementation by Psychologists in Mini-Workshop 8 Cognitive Therapy of Generalised Anxiety Disorder Adrian Wells, University of Manchester Mini-Workshop 9 Using Cognitive Behaviour Therapy with Somatisation and Chronic Illness Presentations Chris Williams, University of Leeds and Stirling Moorey, St Bartholomew's Hospital, London Friday 16th July 1999 Keynote Addresses 17.00 - 18.00 Cognitive Therapy in the Treatment and Prevention of Depression Professor Steve Hollon Chair: Professor Jan Scott, University of Newcastle Theory and Treatment of Intrusive Memories Professor Chris Brewin Chair: Dr Ann Hackman, University of Oxford Saturday 17th July 1999 Morning Session 9.00 - 11.30
9.30 The
Somatoform Disorders; Hypochondriasis, Chronic Pain, Somatisation Disorder - Similarities 10.00 A Model for Understanding and
Treating Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS); Past, Present and Future Directions. 10.30 Coffee 10.50 Treatment of Chronic Fatigue
in Primary Care; Preliminary Results of a Randomised Controlled Trial. 11.20 Cognitive Behavioural
Approaches to Non Epileptic Attacks (Pseudoseizures) - Pilot Data. 11.50 Discussion
9.30
Stop Rules for Catastrophic Worrying. 9.55 Worry
and the Simulation of Desired and Undesired Outcomes 10.20 Memory Bias for
Contamination in Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder 10.45 Coffee 11.05 Attention between
Internal and External Cues in Social Anxiety: Investigation Using a Novel Paradigm 11.30 Maintaining
Factors in Social Anxiety: Investigation Using Speech-Making Exercise. |