Using CBT to decipher dreams

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Using CBT to decipher dreams

Ms. B is a 23-year-old white, married woman who first sought mental health treatment after experiencing depressive symptoms for 4 weeks following the birth of her first child. She endured guilt, hopelessness, anxiety, ruminative thoughts, and irrational fears of impending doom. Fortunately, her symptoms remitted soon after a trial of low-dose selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs). As the therapeutic relationship grew and Ms. B felt more comfortable with her psychiatrist, she acknowledged that she had endured years of low-grade anxiety and frequently experienced maladaptive thoughts that affected her self-esteem. Ms. B reports that she always had a "fear of failing in life." These beliefs were so entrenched and longstanding that she left college early, married, and started a family. Ms. B feels that her medication "puts her mind more at rest." She has a happier relationship with her husband and feels a greater sense of attachment to her baby. However, Ms. B expresses distress as a result of vivid dreams that began soon after she began treatment with SSRIs.

Ms. B is unable to recall the details of her dreams but is very bothered by them. We provided her with psychoeducation about the relationship between SSRIs and disruptive dreams. We informed her that most dreams that occur shortly before awakening are non-REM dreams, which are typical side effects of SSRIs and differ from REM dreams. She was relieved to learn that her reaction to medication is not unique, just as she was relieved to learn that postpartum depression affects up to 15% of new mothers (MMWR 2008;57:361-6)

 

Dr. Sharon Packer

We inquired as to whether the dreams are mostly visual or narrative, explaining that non-REM dreams typically tell stories in words rather than images. Non-REM dreams are more like novels than movies or comics. Ms. B maintains that she has little recall of those dreams, apart from the negative emotions that they evoke. She adds that she does not want to begin a "lengthy psychoanalysis" to understand her dreams, since her child care responsibilities leave her with barely enough time for brief 15- to 20-minute psychiatry visits.

We reassured Ms. B that even brief exploration of her dreams might have a therapeutic function. We suggested that she keep an old-fashioned telephone notepad at her bedside, with long, narrow strips that are just wide enough to write a name and number on. The goal is for her to jot down a word or two about her dreams – but nothing more – so that she can fall back asleep quickly. During the day, those few words will likely help jar her memory enough for her to expand upon her recollections. We recommended against her using her smartphone notepad, because the phone’s bright light could make her more alert and obstruct a quick return to sleep.

When Ms. B looked quizzical, we reminded her that this technique of dream note taking is favored by creative people who capture fleeting nighttime images and ideas for projects. Many patients enjoy learning that Romantic Movement poets such as Samuel Coleridge, as well as many Surrealist artists, turned their dreams into art ("Dreams in Myth, Medicine, and Movies," Westport, Conn.: Praeger, 2002).

Ms. B was able to capture the essence or "spirit" of her most disturbing dreams using this technique. She was both proud and embarrassed when she first brought in her notebook – proud, because she completed her assignment but embarrassed because of the dreams’ content. After being reassured that non-REM dreams tend to be bizarre and are not necessarily representative of the dreamer’s personal attitudes, she admitted that she dreamt about child sacrifice. She stressed that she would never harm her child. Nor did she experience similar daytime fantasies. Having observed her interactions with her infant, we were not concerned with an imminent risk of danger to her child. We used this information to normalize Ms. B’s experience while maintaining a nonjudgmental and supportive therapeutic space.

To reassure Ms. B that her unconscious was not the first to coin such unfathomable concepts, we reminded her that the motif of child sacrifice recurs in myth and religion ("The New Golden Bough: A New Abridgement of the Classic Work by Sir James Frazer," New York: Criterion, 1956). For example, Abraham almost sacrificed his son Isaac. The Bible mentions child sacrifice among Near Eastern goddess cults. This made sense to Ms. B, who had studied the Bible in religious school. She also acknowledged that she had wanted to major in anthropology prior to dropping out of college. She linked her ambivalence about bearing a child to her lapsed college studies, correctly perceiving that this conflict predisposed her to postpartum depression.

 

 

Had Ms. B expressed interest in exploratory therapy – or if we had doubts about her commitment to her child and ability to be a responsible caretaker – we would have referred her to additional resources. However, we sensed that she could be lost to treatment altogether if we demanded more treatment than she was ready to embrace. We drew inspiration from "High-Yield Cognitive-Behavior Therapy for Brief Sessions" (Arlington, Va.: American Psychiatric Publishing, 2010) and used the limited time available to ask targeted questions. Specifically, how did she react to tragic news about untreated postpartum depression?

 

Dr. Michael Ascher

We were not surprised to learn of Ms. B’s secret fears that her depression and dreams could progress to the level of Andrea Yates, the Texas woman with untreated psychosis who responded to delusions and hallucinations by murdering her five children in 2001. Again, we reassured Ms. B that many people share such fears, and that was one reason why the Yates case garnered such media attention. We pointed out differences between Ms. Yates’s life and that of Ms. B, stressing that Ms. B’s decision to seek timely treatment (instead of avoiding it), coupled with her husband’s support and the absence of psychosis dramatically distinguished her situation from Ms. Yates’s.

Ms. B accepted this explanation. Her distress subsided, and she gained a greater sense of self-efficacy. She remained in treatment, attending monthly appointments, and expressing joy about her baby. Ms. B revealed to us that she planned to return to college part time when her baby starts preschool.

Dr. Packer is an assistant clinical professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at Albert Einstein College of Medicine, New York, and is in private practice. Her most recent book is "Cinemas Sinister Psychiatrists: From Caligari to Hannibal" (Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland, 2012). Dr. Ascher is a postdoctoral fellow in addiction psychiatry at the University of Pennsylvania Perelman School of Medicine, Philadelphia, and a candidate at the New York University postdoctoral program in psychotherapy and psychoanalysis. He is a new Clinical Psychiatry News editorial advisory board member.

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Ms. B is a 23-year-old white, married woman who first sought mental health treatment after experiencing depressive symptoms for 4 weeks following the birth of her first child. She endured guilt, hopelessness, anxiety, ruminative thoughts, and irrational fears of impending doom. Fortunately, her symptoms remitted soon after a trial of low-dose selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs). As the therapeutic relationship grew and Ms. B felt more comfortable with her psychiatrist, she acknowledged that she had endured years of low-grade anxiety and frequently experienced maladaptive thoughts that affected her self-esteem. Ms. B reports that she always had a "fear of failing in life." These beliefs were so entrenched and longstanding that she left college early, married, and started a family. Ms. B feels that her medication "puts her mind more at rest." She has a happier relationship with her husband and feels a greater sense of attachment to her baby. However, Ms. B expresses distress as a result of vivid dreams that began soon after she began treatment with SSRIs.

Ms. B is unable to recall the details of her dreams but is very bothered by them. We provided her with psychoeducation about the relationship between SSRIs and disruptive dreams. We informed her that most dreams that occur shortly before awakening are non-REM dreams, which are typical side effects of SSRIs and differ from REM dreams. She was relieved to learn that her reaction to medication is not unique, just as she was relieved to learn that postpartum depression affects up to 15% of new mothers (MMWR 2008;57:361-6)

 

Dr. Sharon Packer

We inquired as to whether the dreams are mostly visual or narrative, explaining that non-REM dreams typically tell stories in words rather than images. Non-REM dreams are more like novels than movies or comics. Ms. B maintains that she has little recall of those dreams, apart from the negative emotions that they evoke. She adds that she does not want to begin a "lengthy psychoanalysis" to understand her dreams, since her child care responsibilities leave her with barely enough time for brief 15- to 20-minute psychiatry visits.

We reassured Ms. B that even brief exploration of her dreams might have a therapeutic function. We suggested that she keep an old-fashioned telephone notepad at her bedside, with long, narrow strips that are just wide enough to write a name and number on. The goal is for her to jot down a word or two about her dreams – but nothing more – so that she can fall back asleep quickly. During the day, those few words will likely help jar her memory enough for her to expand upon her recollections. We recommended against her using her smartphone notepad, because the phone’s bright light could make her more alert and obstruct a quick return to sleep.

When Ms. B looked quizzical, we reminded her that this technique of dream note taking is favored by creative people who capture fleeting nighttime images and ideas for projects. Many patients enjoy learning that Romantic Movement poets such as Samuel Coleridge, as well as many Surrealist artists, turned their dreams into art ("Dreams in Myth, Medicine, and Movies," Westport, Conn.: Praeger, 2002).

Ms. B was able to capture the essence or "spirit" of her most disturbing dreams using this technique. She was both proud and embarrassed when she first brought in her notebook – proud, because she completed her assignment but embarrassed because of the dreams’ content. After being reassured that non-REM dreams tend to be bizarre and are not necessarily representative of the dreamer’s personal attitudes, she admitted that she dreamt about child sacrifice. She stressed that she would never harm her child. Nor did she experience similar daytime fantasies. Having observed her interactions with her infant, we were not concerned with an imminent risk of danger to her child. We used this information to normalize Ms. B’s experience while maintaining a nonjudgmental and supportive therapeutic space.

To reassure Ms. B that her unconscious was not the first to coin such unfathomable concepts, we reminded her that the motif of child sacrifice recurs in myth and religion ("The New Golden Bough: A New Abridgement of the Classic Work by Sir James Frazer," New York: Criterion, 1956). For example, Abraham almost sacrificed his son Isaac. The Bible mentions child sacrifice among Near Eastern goddess cults. This made sense to Ms. B, who had studied the Bible in religious school. She also acknowledged that she had wanted to major in anthropology prior to dropping out of college. She linked her ambivalence about bearing a child to her lapsed college studies, correctly perceiving that this conflict predisposed her to postpartum depression.

 

 

Had Ms. B expressed interest in exploratory therapy – or if we had doubts about her commitment to her child and ability to be a responsible caretaker – we would have referred her to additional resources. However, we sensed that she could be lost to treatment altogether if we demanded more treatment than she was ready to embrace. We drew inspiration from "High-Yield Cognitive-Behavior Therapy for Brief Sessions" (Arlington, Va.: American Psychiatric Publishing, 2010) and used the limited time available to ask targeted questions. Specifically, how did she react to tragic news about untreated postpartum depression?

 

Dr. Michael Ascher

We were not surprised to learn of Ms. B’s secret fears that her depression and dreams could progress to the level of Andrea Yates, the Texas woman with untreated psychosis who responded to delusions and hallucinations by murdering her five children in 2001. Again, we reassured Ms. B that many people share such fears, and that was one reason why the Yates case garnered such media attention. We pointed out differences between Ms. Yates’s life and that of Ms. B, stressing that Ms. B’s decision to seek timely treatment (instead of avoiding it), coupled with her husband’s support and the absence of psychosis dramatically distinguished her situation from Ms. Yates’s.

Ms. B accepted this explanation. Her distress subsided, and she gained a greater sense of self-efficacy. She remained in treatment, attending monthly appointments, and expressing joy about her baby. Ms. B revealed to us that she planned to return to college part time when her baby starts preschool.

Dr. Packer is an assistant clinical professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at Albert Einstein College of Medicine, New York, and is in private practice. Her most recent book is "Cinemas Sinister Psychiatrists: From Caligari to Hannibal" (Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland, 2012). Dr. Ascher is a postdoctoral fellow in addiction psychiatry at the University of Pennsylvania Perelman School of Medicine, Philadelphia, and a candidate at the New York University postdoctoral program in psychotherapy and psychoanalysis. He is a new Clinical Psychiatry News editorial advisory board member.

Ms. B is a 23-year-old white, married woman who first sought mental health treatment after experiencing depressive symptoms for 4 weeks following the birth of her first child. She endured guilt, hopelessness, anxiety, ruminative thoughts, and irrational fears of impending doom. Fortunately, her symptoms remitted soon after a trial of low-dose selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs). As the therapeutic relationship grew and Ms. B felt more comfortable with her psychiatrist, she acknowledged that she had endured years of low-grade anxiety and frequently experienced maladaptive thoughts that affected her self-esteem. Ms. B reports that she always had a "fear of failing in life." These beliefs were so entrenched and longstanding that she left college early, married, and started a family. Ms. B feels that her medication "puts her mind more at rest." She has a happier relationship with her husband and feels a greater sense of attachment to her baby. However, Ms. B expresses distress as a result of vivid dreams that began soon after she began treatment with SSRIs.

Ms. B is unable to recall the details of her dreams but is very bothered by them. We provided her with psychoeducation about the relationship between SSRIs and disruptive dreams. We informed her that most dreams that occur shortly before awakening are non-REM dreams, which are typical side effects of SSRIs and differ from REM dreams. She was relieved to learn that her reaction to medication is not unique, just as she was relieved to learn that postpartum depression affects up to 15% of new mothers (MMWR 2008;57:361-6)

 

Dr. Sharon Packer

We inquired as to whether the dreams are mostly visual or narrative, explaining that non-REM dreams typically tell stories in words rather than images. Non-REM dreams are more like novels than movies or comics. Ms. B maintains that she has little recall of those dreams, apart from the negative emotions that they evoke. She adds that she does not want to begin a "lengthy psychoanalysis" to understand her dreams, since her child care responsibilities leave her with barely enough time for brief 15- to 20-minute psychiatry visits.

We reassured Ms. B that even brief exploration of her dreams might have a therapeutic function. We suggested that she keep an old-fashioned telephone notepad at her bedside, with long, narrow strips that are just wide enough to write a name and number on. The goal is for her to jot down a word or two about her dreams – but nothing more – so that she can fall back asleep quickly. During the day, those few words will likely help jar her memory enough for her to expand upon her recollections. We recommended against her using her smartphone notepad, because the phone’s bright light could make her more alert and obstruct a quick return to sleep.

When Ms. B looked quizzical, we reminded her that this technique of dream note taking is favored by creative people who capture fleeting nighttime images and ideas for projects. Many patients enjoy learning that Romantic Movement poets such as Samuel Coleridge, as well as many Surrealist artists, turned their dreams into art ("Dreams in Myth, Medicine, and Movies," Westport, Conn.: Praeger, 2002).

Ms. B was able to capture the essence or "spirit" of her most disturbing dreams using this technique. She was both proud and embarrassed when she first brought in her notebook – proud, because she completed her assignment but embarrassed because of the dreams’ content. After being reassured that non-REM dreams tend to be bizarre and are not necessarily representative of the dreamer’s personal attitudes, she admitted that she dreamt about child sacrifice. She stressed that she would never harm her child. Nor did she experience similar daytime fantasies. Having observed her interactions with her infant, we were not concerned with an imminent risk of danger to her child. We used this information to normalize Ms. B’s experience while maintaining a nonjudgmental and supportive therapeutic space.

To reassure Ms. B that her unconscious was not the first to coin such unfathomable concepts, we reminded her that the motif of child sacrifice recurs in myth and religion ("The New Golden Bough: A New Abridgement of the Classic Work by Sir James Frazer," New York: Criterion, 1956). For example, Abraham almost sacrificed his son Isaac. The Bible mentions child sacrifice among Near Eastern goddess cults. This made sense to Ms. B, who had studied the Bible in religious school. She also acknowledged that she had wanted to major in anthropology prior to dropping out of college. She linked her ambivalence about bearing a child to her lapsed college studies, correctly perceiving that this conflict predisposed her to postpartum depression.

 

 

Had Ms. B expressed interest in exploratory therapy – or if we had doubts about her commitment to her child and ability to be a responsible caretaker – we would have referred her to additional resources. However, we sensed that she could be lost to treatment altogether if we demanded more treatment than she was ready to embrace. We drew inspiration from "High-Yield Cognitive-Behavior Therapy for Brief Sessions" (Arlington, Va.: American Psychiatric Publishing, 2010) and used the limited time available to ask targeted questions. Specifically, how did she react to tragic news about untreated postpartum depression?

 

Dr. Michael Ascher

We were not surprised to learn of Ms. B’s secret fears that her depression and dreams could progress to the level of Andrea Yates, the Texas woman with untreated psychosis who responded to delusions and hallucinations by murdering her five children in 2001. Again, we reassured Ms. B that many people share such fears, and that was one reason why the Yates case garnered such media attention. We pointed out differences between Ms. Yates’s life and that of Ms. B, stressing that Ms. B’s decision to seek timely treatment (instead of avoiding it), coupled with her husband’s support and the absence of psychosis dramatically distinguished her situation from Ms. Yates’s.

Ms. B accepted this explanation. Her distress subsided, and she gained a greater sense of self-efficacy. She remained in treatment, attending monthly appointments, and expressing joy about her baby. Ms. B revealed to us that she planned to return to college part time when her baby starts preschool.

Dr. Packer is an assistant clinical professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at Albert Einstein College of Medicine, New York, and is in private practice. Her most recent book is "Cinemas Sinister Psychiatrists: From Caligari to Hannibal" (Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland, 2012). Dr. Ascher is a postdoctoral fellow in addiction psychiatry at the University of Pennsylvania Perelman School of Medicine, Philadelphia, and a candidate at the New York University postdoctoral program in psychotherapy and psychoanalysis. He is a new Clinical Psychiatry News editorial advisory board member.

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Therapy helps visually impaired patient with depression

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Therapy helps visually impaired patient with depression

Ms. A is a 51-year-old woman with a longstanding history of anxiety and recent loss of functioning because of polyneuropathy and progressive visual loss from years of uncontrolled diabetes. She is highly intelligent and well spoken, and enjoys reading novels, writing poems, and painting. Although Ms. A is no longer able to run her graphic design business, she has been unable to gather the strength to dissolve the business properly. She lives with her elderly aunt and has a home attendant 5 days per week. During her most recent medication management visit, she tearfully states that she feels very lonely and angry and that life seems hopeless.

Helping patients alleviate suffering associated with the loss of social, occupational, and psychological functioning is fundamental to the work we do as clinicians. Understanding and supporting the needs of visually impaired patients are an underappreciated topic deserving more awareness, especially since depression strikes persons with visual loss nearly twice as often as it does the general population (JAMA Ophthalmol. 2013;131:573-81). There is much more discussion about the needs of hearing-impaired patients, partly because of medicolegal concerns surrounding sign language interpreters.

Dr. Sharon Packer

Clinicians need to do a better job of effectively cultivating a greater sense of well-being and agency for patients suffering from visual loss.

In the case described above, Ms. A experienced a variety of emotions – guilt, anger, sadness, and hopelessness – in response to the realization that she had neglected her health for years, resulting in irreparable damage to her eyesight. Over the course of many sessions, Ms. A was given space to grieve the loss. She was open to exploring the negative cognitions that kept her in a state of inertia, putting her at risk of greater harm.

During this process, we elicited the patient’s motivations for enriching her life while problem solving around potential barriers. Using psychoeducation, we explained how unremitted depression amplified her guilt, and how guilt contributes to beliefs that treatment is undeserved. Those cognitions, in turn, can prompt avoidance of treatment altogether. To assuage her feelings of weakness about feeling depressed, we explained the research linking depression and visual loss.

Because Ms. A receives psychopharmacological treatment for depression, along with meds from many other prescribers, we addressed potential pitfalls. Pharmacies do not automatically provide verbal or large print instructions, so we contacted other prescribers and encouraged them to write "low vision" on prescriptions. Knowing that depressed or disabled persons may be reluctant to advocate for themselves, we telephoned her pharmacist in advance. We informed Ms. A that generics are often substituted for one another, so pills change size and shape. For visually impaired persons who rely on tactile cues to distinguish pills, such misidentification can prove deadly!

As a recipient of government-subsidized health insurance, Ms. A was eligible for visiting nursing services to arrange her meds. Patients with commercial insurance or no insurance can access related services through an ophthalmologist’s "low vision evaluation." In our experience, these referrals are not automatic, so contacting relative treaters directly is recommended.

Ms. A. was made aware of The Lighthouse, where volunteers read to the visually impaired, adding a human connection to "talking books." As a self-employed person, she did not need contact with federal Americans with Disabilities services, where visually impaired attorneys offer telephone advice (and inspiration). We deferred referral to Vocational and Educational Services for Individuals with Disabilities for vocational training before she fully mourned her visual loss.

Ms. A. did not volunteer mythical, cultural, or religious beliefs associated with her vision loss, so we inquired directly, since these factors can influence self-acceptance. Oedipus is arguably psychiatry’s best-known myth overall but is hardly the only classical myth about blindness.

Dr. Michael Ascher

"Bulfinchs Mythology" lists several mortals and deities who lost vision, with some gaining extra "insight" after losing sight and being credited with superhuman or prophetic abilities rather than discredited for their deficits. Because Deuteronomy links blindness (and madness) to punishment for sin (Deuteronomy 28:15-68), while the Gospels credit Jesus with healing the blind (Mark 8:22-6; Matthew 9:27-31), we queried her religious beliefs, either current or deep seated, and prepared her for a resurgence of long-forgotten Sunday school teachings under stress.

Ms. A’s interest in the visual arts caused concern in light of her condition, making us wonder whether she would benefit from redirecting her aesthetic interests to music. Appreciating music without sight is easy. There is a long list of renowned visually impaired musicians, including Stevie Wonder, Ray Charles, Art Tatum, Blind Willie McTell, and The Blind Boys of Alabama for starters. However, we chose to focus on established interests before encouraging alternative interests. We alerted her to museums that host "touchable" art shows or arrange annotated gallery tours for the visually challenged.

 

 

Soho’s Museum of Comic and Cartoon Art was one such museum, which coincidentally showcased images of blinded superheroes (Dr. Mid-Nite and Daredevil) who developed other skills after losing physical sight (Superheroes and Superegos: Analyzing the Minds Behind the Masks; Santa Barbara, Calif.: ABC-CLIO-Praeger, 2009). Such excursions into fantasy encourage brainstorming about creative ways to cultivate new skills, while broaching reality testing about what is possible in today’s world.

Ms. A has continued to make slow, but steady progress, and is less dysphoric and more hopeful. The therapeutic alliance is strong, and Ms. A is setting new goals for herself and making use of the resources we provided to her.

Dr. Packer is an assistant clinical professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at Albert Einstein College of Medicine, New York, and is in private practice. Her most recent book is Cinemas Sinister Psychiatrists: From Caligari to Hannibal (Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland, 2012). Dr. Ascher is a senior resident in psychiatry at Beth Israel Medical Center, New York.

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Ms. A is a 51-year-old woman with a longstanding history of anxiety and recent loss of functioning because of polyneuropathy and progressive visual loss from years of uncontrolled diabetes. She is highly intelligent and well spoken, and enjoys reading novels, writing poems, and painting. Although Ms. A is no longer able to run her graphic design business, she has been unable to gather the strength to dissolve the business properly. She lives with her elderly aunt and has a home attendant 5 days per week. During her most recent medication management visit, she tearfully states that she feels very lonely and angry and that life seems hopeless.

Helping patients alleviate suffering associated with the loss of social, occupational, and psychological functioning is fundamental to the work we do as clinicians. Understanding and supporting the needs of visually impaired patients are an underappreciated topic deserving more awareness, especially since depression strikes persons with visual loss nearly twice as often as it does the general population (JAMA Ophthalmol. 2013;131:573-81). There is much more discussion about the needs of hearing-impaired patients, partly because of medicolegal concerns surrounding sign language interpreters.

Dr. Sharon Packer

Clinicians need to do a better job of effectively cultivating a greater sense of well-being and agency for patients suffering from visual loss.

In the case described above, Ms. A experienced a variety of emotions – guilt, anger, sadness, and hopelessness – in response to the realization that she had neglected her health for years, resulting in irreparable damage to her eyesight. Over the course of many sessions, Ms. A was given space to grieve the loss. She was open to exploring the negative cognitions that kept her in a state of inertia, putting her at risk of greater harm.

During this process, we elicited the patient’s motivations for enriching her life while problem solving around potential barriers. Using psychoeducation, we explained how unremitted depression amplified her guilt, and how guilt contributes to beliefs that treatment is undeserved. Those cognitions, in turn, can prompt avoidance of treatment altogether. To assuage her feelings of weakness about feeling depressed, we explained the research linking depression and visual loss.

Because Ms. A receives psychopharmacological treatment for depression, along with meds from many other prescribers, we addressed potential pitfalls. Pharmacies do not automatically provide verbal or large print instructions, so we contacted other prescribers and encouraged them to write "low vision" on prescriptions. Knowing that depressed or disabled persons may be reluctant to advocate for themselves, we telephoned her pharmacist in advance. We informed Ms. A that generics are often substituted for one another, so pills change size and shape. For visually impaired persons who rely on tactile cues to distinguish pills, such misidentification can prove deadly!

As a recipient of government-subsidized health insurance, Ms. A was eligible for visiting nursing services to arrange her meds. Patients with commercial insurance or no insurance can access related services through an ophthalmologist’s "low vision evaluation." In our experience, these referrals are not automatic, so contacting relative treaters directly is recommended.

Ms. A. was made aware of The Lighthouse, where volunteers read to the visually impaired, adding a human connection to "talking books." As a self-employed person, she did not need contact with federal Americans with Disabilities services, where visually impaired attorneys offer telephone advice (and inspiration). We deferred referral to Vocational and Educational Services for Individuals with Disabilities for vocational training before she fully mourned her visual loss.

Ms. A. did not volunteer mythical, cultural, or religious beliefs associated with her vision loss, so we inquired directly, since these factors can influence self-acceptance. Oedipus is arguably psychiatry’s best-known myth overall but is hardly the only classical myth about blindness.

Dr. Michael Ascher

"Bulfinchs Mythology" lists several mortals and deities who lost vision, with some gaining extra "insight" after losing sight and being credited with superhuman or prophetic abilities rather than discredited for their deficits. Because Deuteronomy links blindness (and madness) to punishment for sin (Deuteronomy 28:15-68), while the Gospels credit Jesus with healing the blind (Mark 8:22-6; Matthew 9:27-31), we queried her religious beliefs, either current or deep seated, and prepared her for a resurgence of long-forgotten Sunday school teachings under stress.

Ms. A’s interest in the visual arts caused concern in light of her condition, making us wonder whether she would benefit from redirecting her aesthetic interests to music. Appreciating music without sight is easy. There is a long list of renowned visually impaired musicians, including Stevie Wonder, Ray Charles, Art Tatum, Blind Willie McTell, and The Blind Boys of Alabama for starters. However, we chose to focus on established interests before encouraging alternative interests. We alerted her to museums that host "touchable" art shows or arrange annotated gallery tours for the visually challenged.

 

 

Soho’s Museum of Comic and Cartoon Art was one such museum, which coincidentally showcased images of blinded superheroes (Dr. Mid-Nite and Daredevil) who developed other skills after losing physical sight (Superheroes and Superegos: Analyzing the Minds Behind the Masks; Santa Barbara, Calif.: ABC-CLIO-Praeger, 2009). Such excursions into fantasy encourage brainstorming about creative ways to cultivate new skills, while broaching reality testing about what is possible in today’s world.

Ms. A has continued to make slow, but steady progress, and is less dysphoric and more hopeful. The therapeutic alliance is strong, and Ms. A is setting new goals for herself and making use of the resources we provided to her.

Dr. Packer is an assistant clinical professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at Albert Einstein College of Medicine, New York, and is in private practice. Her most recent book is Cinemas Sinister Psychiatrists: From Caligari to Hannibal (Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland, 2012). Dr. Ascher is a senior resident in psychiatry at Beth Israel Medical Center, New York.

Ms. A is a 51-year-old woman with a longstanding history of anxiety and recent loss of functioning because of polyneuropathy and progressive visual loss from years of uncontrolled diabetes. She is highly intelligent and well spoken, and enjoys reading novels, writing poems, and painting. Although Ms. A is no longer able to run her graphic design business, she has been unable to gather the strength to dissolve the business properly. She lives with her elderly aunt and has a home attendant 5 days per week. During her most recent medication management visit, she tearfully states that she feels very lonely and angry and that life seems hopeless.

Helping patients alleviate suffering associated with the loss of social, occupational, and psychological functioning is fundamental to the work we do as clinicians. Understanding and supporting the needs of visually impaired patients are an underappreciated topic deserving more awareness, especially since depression strikes persons with visual loss nearly twice as often as it does the general population (JAMA Ophthalmol. 2013;131:573-81). There is much more discussion about the needs of hearing-impaired patients, partly because of medicolegal concerns surrounding sign language interpreters.

Dr. Sharon Packer

Clinicians need to do a better job of effectively cultivating a greater sense of well-being and agency for patients suffering from visual loss.

In the case described above, Ms. A experienced a variety of emotions – guilt, anger, sadness, and hopelessness – in response to the realization that she had neglected her health for years, resulting in irreparable damage to her eyesight. Over the course of many sessions, Ms. A was given space to grieve the loss. She was open to exploring the negative cognitions that kept her in a state of inertia, putting her at risk of greater harm.

During this process, we elicited the patient’s motivations for enriching her life while problem solving around potential barriers. Using psychoeducation, we explained how unremitted depression amplified her guilt, and how guilt contributes to beliefs that treatment is undeserved. Those cognitions, in turn, can prompt avoidance of treatment altogether. To assuage her feelings of weakness about feeling depressed, we explained the research linking depression and visual loss.

Because Ms. A receives psychopharmacological treatment for depression, along with meds from many other prescribers, we addressed potential pitfalls. Pharmacies do not automatically provide verbal or large print instructions, so we contacted other prescribers and encouraged them to write "low vision" on prescriptions. Knowing that depressed or disabled persons may be reluctant to advocate for themselves, we telephoned her pharmacist in advance. We informed Ms. A that generics are often substituted for one another, so pills change size and shape. For visually impaired persons who rely on tactile cues to distinguish pills, such misidentification can prove deadly!

As a recipient of government-subsidized health insurance, Ms. A was eligible for visiting nursing services to arrange her meds. Patients with commercial insurance or no insurance can access related services through an ophthalmologist’s "low vision evaluation." In our experience, these referrals are not automatic, so contacting relative treaters directly is recommended.

Ms. A. was made aware of The Lighthouse, where volunteers read to the visually impaired, adding a human connection to "talking books." As a self-employed person, she did not need contact with federal Americans with Disabilities services, where visually impaired attorneys offer telephone advice (and inspiration). We deferred referral to Vocational and Educational Services for Individuals with Disabilities for vocational training before she fully mourned her visual loss.

Ms. A. did not volunteer mythical, cultural, or religious beliefs associated with her vision loss, so we inquired directly, since these factors can influence self-acceptance. Oedipus is arguably psychiatry’s best-known myth overall but is hardly the only classical myth about blindness.

Dr. Michael Ascher

"Bulfinchs Mythology" lists several mortals and deities who lost vision, with some gaining extra "insight" after losing sight and being credited with superhuman or prophetic abilities rather than discredited for their deficits. Because Deuteronomy links blindness (and madness) to punishment for sin (Deuteronomy 28:15-68), while the Gospels credit Jesus with healing the blind (Mark 8:22-6; Matthew 9:27-31), we queried her religious beliefs, either current or deep seated, and prepared her for a resurgence of long-forgotten Sunday school teachings under stress.

Ms. A’s interest in the visual arts caused concern in light of her condition, making us wonder whether she would benefit from redirecting her aesthetic interests to music. Appreciating music without sight is easy. There is a long list of renowned visually impaired musicians, including Stevie Wonder, Ray Charles, Art Tatum, Blind Willie McTell, and The Blind Boys of Alabama for starters. However, we chose to focus on established interests before encouraging alternative interests. We alerted her to museums that host "touchable" art shows or arrange annotated gallery tours for the visually challenged.

 

 

Soho’s Museum of Comic and Cartoon Art was one such museum, which coincidentally showcased images of blinded superheroes (Dr. Mid-Nite and Daredevil) who developed other skills after losing physical sight (Superheroes and Superegos: Analyzing the Minds Behind the Masks; Santa Barbara, Calif.: ABC-CLIO-Praeger, 2009). Such excursions into fantasy encourage brainstorming about creative ways to cultivate new skills, while broaching reality testing about what is possible in today’s world.

Ms. A has continued to make slow, but steady progress, and is less dysphoric and more hopeful. The therapeutic alliance is strong, and Ms. A is setting new goals for herself and making use of the resources we provided to her.

Dr. Packer is an assistant clinical professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at Albert Einstein College of Medicine, New York, and is in private practice. Her most recent book is Cinemas Sinister Psychiatrists: From Caligari to Hannibal (Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland, 2012). Dr. Ascher is a senior resident in psychiatry at Beth Israel Medical Center, New York.

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Therapy helps visually impaired patient with depression
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Therapy helps visually impaired patient with depression
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anxiety, polyneuropathy, visual loss, diabetes, depression
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anxiety, polyneuropathy, visual loss, diabetes, depression
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