Documents found

  1. 791.

    Article published in Santé mentale au Québec (scholarly, collection Érudit)

    Volume 36, Issue 1, 2011

    Digital publication year: 2011

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    Dissociation is a disturbing psychiatric concept fraught with controversy. It is however encountered in clinical contexts and has to be understood by clinicians. This article based on a Pubmed/Ovid on line research with key words dissociation and borderline personality disorder and other references, describes the clinical aspects of the dissociative phenomena in patients with borderline personality disorder. Psychodynamic hypotheses and neurophysiological data are examined to explain dissociation. Neurophysiological and neuroanatomical variables provided by cerebral imagery controlled studies support hypotheses brought forward. The article concludes with a defence mechanism developed within a context of biological predisposition, deprived psychological development and in reaction to trauma. In conclusion, emerging psychotherapeutic solutions are summarized.

  2. 792.

    Article published in Santé mentale au Québec (scholarly, collection Érudit)

    Volume 38, Issue 2, 2013

    Digital publication year: 2014

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    Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) is one of the main approaches in psychotherapy. It teaches the patient to examine the link between dysfunctional thoughts and maladaptive behaviors and to re- evaluate the cognitive biases involved in the maintenance of symptoms by using strategies such as guided discovery. CBT is constantly evolving in part to improve its' effectiveness and accessibility. Thus in the last decade, increasingly popular approaches based on mindfulness and acceptance have emerged. These therapies do not attempt to modify cognitions even when they are biased and dysfunctional but rather seek a change in the relationship between the individual and the symptoms. This article aims to present the historical context that has allowed the emergence of this trend, the points of convergence and divergence with traditional CBT as well as a brief presentation of the different therapies based on mindfulness meditation and acceptance. Hayes (2004) described three successive waves in behavior therapy, each characterized by “dominant assumptions, methods and goals”: traditional behavior therapy, cognitive therapy and therapies based on mindfulness meditation and acceptance. The latter consider that human suffering occurs when the individual lives a restricted life in order avoid pain and immediate discomfort to the detriment of his global wellbeing. These therapies combine mindfulness, experiential, acceptance strategies with traditional behavior principles in order to attain lasting results. There are significant points of convergence between traditional CBT and therapies based on mindfulness meditation and acceptance. They are both empirically validated, based upon a theoretical model postulating that avoidance is key in the maintenance of psychopathology and they recommend an approach strategy in order to overcome the identified problem. They both use behavioral techniques in the context of a collaborative relationship in order to identify precise problems and to achieve specific goals. They focus on the present moment rather than on historical causes. However, they also present significant differences: control vs acceptance of thoughts, focus on cognition vs behavior, focus on the relationship between the individual and his thoughts vs cognitive content, goal of modifying dysfunctional beliefs vs metacognitive processes, use of experiential vs didactic methods, focus on symptoms vs quality of life, strategies used before vs after the unfolding of full emotional response. The main interventions based on mindfulness meditation and acceptance are: Acceptance and Commitment Therapy, Functional Analytic Therapy, the expanded model of Behavioral Activation, Metacognitive Therapy, Mindfulness based Cognitive Therapy, Dialectic Behavior Therapy, Integrative Behavioral Couples Therapy and Compassionate Mind Training. These are described in this article. They offer concepts and techniques which might enhance therapeutic efficacy. They teach a new way to deploy attention and to enter into a relationship with current experience (for example, defusion) in order to diminish cognitive reactivity, a maintenance factor for psychopathology, and to enhance psychological flexibility. The focus on cognitive process, metacognition as well as cognitive content might yield additional benefits in therapy. It is possible to combine traditional CBT with third wave approaches by using psychoeducation and cognitive restructuring in the beginning phases of therapy in order to establish thought bias and to then encourage acceptance of internal experiences as well as exposure to feared stimuli rather than to continue to use cognitive restructuring techniques. Traditional CBT and third wave approaches seem to impact different processes: the former enhance the capacity to observe and describe experiences and the latter diminish experiential avoidance and increase conscious action as well as acceptance. The identification of personal values helps to motivate the individual to undertake actions required in order to enhance quality of life. In the case of chronic illness, it diminishes suffering by increasing acceptance. Although the evidence base supporting the efficacy of third wave approaches is less robust than in the case of traditional cognitive or behavior therapy, therapies based on mindfulness meditation and acceptance are promising interventions that might help to elucidate change process and offer complementary strategies in order to help patients.

    Keywords: thérapie cognitivo-comportementale, acceptation, pleine conscience, troisième vague, cognitive-behavioral therapy, acceptance, mindfulness, third wave

  3. 793.

    Other published in Santé mentale au Québec (scholarly, collection Érudit)

    Volume 40, Issue 1, 2015

    Digital publication year: 2015

  4. 794.

    Article published in Santé mentale au Québec (scholarly, collection Érudit)

    Volume 40, Issue 2, 2015

    Digital publication year: 2015

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    This text narrates the evolution, since the 1960s, of different events that marked the history of psychiatry in the French-Canadian province of Quebec. From his personal experience, the author discussesThe evolution of the Département de psychiatrie de l'Université de Montréal from where were issued more than 1000 psychiatrists who shaped clinical practice and research developments worthy of mention throughout the years.The evolution of diagnostic nosology from the DSM-II, very influenced by psychoanalysis, to the DSM-5 that is more atheoretical, but that is still not based on objective data, which remains a challenge to the etiology of mental illness.The psychiatric drugs that we have learned to prescribe in the past 50 years in a more rational way thanks to a better understanding of their action mechanisms. In reality, there has been no discovery of new drug categories; rather it is the way we prescribe medication that evolved.The great adventure of the first textbook of Quebec psychiatry, which was first published in 1980, and is forthcoming in its 4th edition in 2015 in an improved and expanded format. The forthcoming version takes into consideration the developments in psychiatry.The creation of the Young Adults Clinic in 1988, providing treatment and rehabilitation to young adults in the early stages of schizophrenia, as well as psycho-educational support and information to their family members. Through the years, this clinic had a considerable acknowledgement in Quebec and other French-speaking nations.

    Keywords: Département de psychiatrie, nosologie diagnostique, médication psychiatrique, manuel de psychiatrie, schizophrénie, Department of psychiatry, diagnostic nosology, psychiatric drugs, textbook of psychiatry, schizophrenia

  5. 795.

    Article published in Santé mentale au Québec (scholarly, collection Érudit)

    Volume 40, Issue 2, 2015

    Digital publication year: 2015

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    Objectives In the context of the fiftieth anniversary celebrations of the Département de psychiatrie de l'Université de Montréal, the present article offers to retrace the history of the Psychiatry Resident's Association (ARPUM). Since the Association's activities and demands reflected the concerns of the time, a depiction of the Residency Program and exploration of the historical and administrative context, in each key period, is also undertaken.Methods Multiple psychiatrists from every decade, who were once active members of the Association, were interviewed and asked to describe the Residency Program at their time, with its positive and negative aspects, based on their own personal experience as a resident, but also as a member of the organization. The interviewees were also invited to share their recollections of the various Association's demands, representations, activities and functioning, depending on the issues and periods. Various private and public archives were also used, in order to contextualize the residents' experiences and the Association's work.Results A brief exploration of the historical and political context that led to the creation of the organization is explained. Training and working conditions of residents at that time are reported, enabling the understanding of the first demands when the group was born. Historical jumps are then proposed, from decades to decades, in order to depict key issues, whether they were academic, clinical or organizational, through which the Association worked, over the evolution of the Residency Program. The internal functioning and its occasional problems throughout the years are also described, as is the role in organizing social and educational events.Conclusions The Residency Program is in constant mutation, and the Association has played its part in shaping the psychiatric training at the Université de Montréal. Multiple positive and tangible impacts were and are still made possible from the collaborative work between the Département de psychiatrie, the Residency Program and the Resident's Association.

    Keywords: historique, psychiatrie, résidence, Montréal, association, psychiatry, residency, history, Montreal, association

  6. 796.

    Other published in Santé mentale au Québec (scholarly, collection Érudit)

    Volume 40, Issue 2, 2015

    Digital publication year: 2015

  7. 797.

    Article published in Nuit blanche (cultural, collection Érudit)

    Issue 30, 1987-1988

    Digital publication year: 2010

  8. 800.

    Article published in Québec français (cultural, collection Érudit)

    Issue 105, 1997

    Digital publication year: 2010