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Clinical formulation
A clinical formulation, also known as case formulation and problem formulation, is a theoretically-based explanation or conceptualisation of the information obtained from a clinical assessment. It offers a hypothesis about the cause and nature of the presenting problems and is considered an adjunct or alternative approach to the more categorical approach of psychiatric diagnosis. In clinical practice, formulations are used to communicate a hypothesis and provide framework for developing the most suitable treatment approach. It is most commonly used by clinical psychologists and is deemed to be a core component of that profession. Mental health nurses, social workers, and some psychiatrists may also use formulations.
Types of formulation
Different psychological schools or models utilize clinical formulations, including cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) and related therapies: systemic therapy,psychodynamic therapy, and applied behavior analysis. The structure and content of a clinical formulation is determined by the psychological model. Most systems of formulation contain the following broad categories of information: symptoms and problems; precipitating stressors or events; predisposing life events or stressors; and an explanatory mechanism that links the preceding categories together and offers a description of the precipitants and maintaining influences of the person's problems.
Behavioral case formulations used in applied behavior analysis and behavior therapy are built on a rank list of problem behaviors, from which a functional analysis is conducted, sometimes based on relational frame theory. Such functional analysis is also used in third-generation behavior therapy or clinical behavior analysis such as acceptance and commitment therapy and functional analytic psychotherapy. Functional analysis looks at setting events (ecological variables, history effects, and motivating operations), antecedents, behavior chains, the problem behavior, and the consequences, short- and long-term, for the behavior.
A model of formulation that is more specific to CBT is described by Jacqueline Persons. This has seven components: problem list, core beliefs, precipitants and activating situations, origins, working hypothesis, treatment plan, and predicted obstacles to treatment.
A psychodynamic formulation would consist of a summarizing statement, a description of nondynamic factors, description of core psychodynamics using a specific model (such as ego psychology, object relations or self psychology), and a prognostic assessment which identifies the potential areas of resistance in therapy.
One school of psychotherapy which relies heavily on the formulation is cognitive analytic therapy (CAT). CAT is a fixed-term therapy, typically of around 16 sessions. At around session four, a formal written reformulation letter is offered to the patient which forms the basis for the rest of the treatment. This is usually followed by a diagrammatic reformulation to amplify and reinforce the letter.
Many psychologists use an integrative psychotherapy approach to formulation. This is to take advantage of the benefits of resources from each model the psychologist is trained in, according to the patient's needs.
Critical evaluation of formulations
The quality of specific clinical formulations, and the quality of the general theoretical models used in those formulations, can be evaluated with criteria such as:
- Clarity and parsimony: Is the model understandable and internally consistent, and are key concepts discrete, specific, and non-redundant?
- Precision and testability: Does the model produce testable hypotheses, with operationally defined and measurable concepts?
- Empirical adequacy: Are the posited mechanisms within the model empirically validated?
- Comprehensiveness and generalizability: Is the model holistic enough to apply across a range of clinical phenomena?
- Utility and applied value: Does it facilitate shared meaning-making between clinician and client, and are interventions based on the model shown to be effective?
Formulations can vary in temporal scope from case-based to episode-based or moment-based, and formulations may evolve during the course of treatment. Therefore, ongoing monitoring, testing, and assessment during treatment are necessary: monitoring can take the form of session-by-session progress reviews using quantitative measures, and formulations can be modified if an intervention is not as effective as hoped.
History
Psychologist George Kelly, who developed personal construct theory in the 1950s, noted his complaint against traditional diagnosis in his book The Psychology of Personal Constructs (1955): "Much of the reform proposed by the psychology of personal constructs is directed towards the tendency for psychologists to impose preemptive constructions upon human behaviour. Diagnosis is all too frequently an attempt to cram a whole live struggling client into a nosological category." In place of nosological categories, Kelly used the word "formulation" and mentioned two types of formulation: a first stage of structuralization, in which the clinician tentatively organizes clinical case information "in terms of dimensions rather than in terms of disease entities" while focusing on "the more important ways in which the client can change, and not merely ways in which the psychologist can distinguish him from other persons", and a second stage of construction, in which the clinician seeks a kind of negotiated integration of the clinician's organization of the case information with the client's personal meanings.
Psychologists Hans Eysenck, Monte B. Shapiro, Vic Meyer, and Ira Turkat were also among the early developers of systematic individualized alternatives to diagnosis. Meyer has been credited with providing perhaps the first training course of behaviour therapy based on a case formulation model, at the Middlesex Hospital Medical School in London in 1970. Meyer's original choice of words for clinical formulation were "behavioural formulation" or "problem formulation".
See also
Further reading
- Eells, Tracy D., ed. (2007) [1997]. Handbook of psychotherapy case formulation (2nd ed.). New York: Guilford Press. ISBN 9781593853518. OCLC 65617415.
- Eells, Tracy D. (2015). Psychotherapy case formulation. Theories of psychotherapy series. Washington, DC: American Psychological Association. ISBN 9781433820106. OCLC 897001581.
- Frank, Rochelle I.; Davidson, Joan (2014). The transdiagnostic road map to case formulation and treatment planning: practical guidance for clinical decision making. Oakland, CA: New Harbinger Publications. ISBN 9781608828951. OCLC 819383623.
- Goldman, Rhonda N.; Greenberg, Leslie S. (2015). Case formulation in emotion-focused therapy: co-creating clinical maps for change. Washington, DC: American Psychological Association. ISBN 9781433818202. OCLC 878667783.
- Hallam, Richard S. (2013). Individual case formulation. Practical resources for the mental health professional. Amsterdam: Elsevier/Academic Press. ISBN 9780123982698. OCLC 819717435.
- Haynes, Stephen N.; O'Brien, William Hayes; Kaholokula, Joseph Keaweʻaimoku (2011). Behavioral assessment and case formulation. Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 9781118018644. OCLC 701808359.
- Ingram, Barbara Lichner (2012) [2006]. Clinical case formulations: matching the integrative treatment plan to the client (2nd ed.). Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 9781118038222. OCLC 723035074.
- Johnstone, Lucy; Dallos, Rudi, eds. (2013) [2006]. Formulation in psychology and psychotherapy: making sense of people's problems (2nd ed.). London; New York: Routledge. ISBN 9780415682305. OCLC 894506578.
- Kleiger, Mary Jo Peebles (2012) [2002]. Beginnings: the art and science of planning psychotherapy (2nd ed.). New York: Routledge. ISBN 9780415883085. OCLC 706022579.
- Persons, Jacqueline B. (2008). The case formulation approach to cognitive-behavior therapy. Guides to individualized evidence-based treatment. New York: Guilford Press. ISBN 9781593858759. OCLC 226356799.
- Wilson, F. Robert (2012). "Assessment, diagnosis, and treatment planning from the ecological perspective". In Cook, Ellen Piel (ed.). Understanding people in context: the ecological perspective in counseling. Alexandria, VA: American Counseling Association. pp. 179–206. doi:10.1002/9781119222743.ch8. ISBN 9781556202872. OCLC 764589015.
- Woody, Sheila R.; Detweiler-Bedell, Jerusha; Teachman, Bethany A.; O'Hearn, Todd (2003). Treatment planning in psychotherapy: taking the guesswork out of clinical care. New York: Guilford Press. ISBN 1572308052. OCLC 49743479.
- Zayfert, Claudia; Becker, Carolyn Black (2007). Cognitive-behavioral therapy for PTSD: a case formulation approach. Guides to individualized evidence-based treatment. New York: Guilford Press. ISBN 9781593853693. OCLC 71139450.