Take Home Points
With careful observation of what is really going on psychophysiologically, you can help people take charge of themselves. With this comes an increasing sense of self-efficacy and a belief in the controllability of previously uncontrollable emotional states. As this happens, much of the out-of-control panic feelings patients have will dissipate. Depression begins to lift rapidly and enduringly as patients realize there is actually something they personally can do to improve the way they feel and the way they operate their nervous system.
Your patients can benefit from learning to lower their anxiety and improve their ability to drop themselves at will into an emotionally and physically relaxed, but mentally alert and focused state. This is easy enough to promote with a variety of biofeedback methods, ranging from peripheral feedback of muscle tension and autonomic indicators to various aspects of the brain's electrical activity. A final excellent reason to add biofeedback to your practice is that patients volunteer to stay in treatment longer when neurofeedback is offered to them (Scott et al. 2005).
Historically, biofeedback efficacy has been recognized for some decades now, but it has been trivialized as relaxation training when in fact it offers a powerful pathway for enhanced self-regulatory status of the whole nervous system. This has particular import for conditions with a significant neurophysiological component that impedes recovery by conventional therapeutic methods. The role of biofeedback in recovery is particularly compelling when the dysregulation manifests in so many different systems, as is the case in eating disorders and in addictions, (Trocki, 2007).
References
Association for Applied Psychophysiology and Biofeedback: http://www.aapb.org
Biofeedback Certification Institute of American: http://www.bcia.org
International Society for Neurofeedback and Research: http://www.bcia.org
EEG neurofeedback for treating psychiatric disorders. Oubré A. (2002) Psychiatric Times, July 1, 2002, from click here
Benson, Herbert; Klipper, Miriam Z. 2000 Relaxation Response, New York, NY, Harper Collins.
The Neurological Basis of Eating Disorders. I: EEG Findings and the Clinical Outcome of Adding Symptom-Based, QEEG-Based, and Analog/QEEG-Based Remedial Neurofeedback Training to Traditional Treatment Plans. Peter N. Smith, PsyD, Marvin W. Sams, ND, Leslie Sherlin, BA. Presented at ISNR conference 2006.
Schwartz, M. & Olson, R. (1995). A historical perspective on the field of biofeedback and applied psychophysiology. (pgs 3-18). In M.S. Schwartz (Ed). Biofeedback: A Practitioner's Guide (2nd Ed). New York: Guilford Press.
Leher, Paul M, Woolfolk & Robert L. & Sime, Wesley E. Eds, (2007), Principles and Practices of Stress Management, New York, NY, The Guilford Press.
Neurofeedback in Psychological Practice. Masterpasqua, Frank; Healey, Kathryn N. Source: Professional Psychology: Research and Practice December 2003 Vol. 34, No. 6, 652-656
Is there an Anti-Neurofeedback Conspiracy? Karen F. Trocki Journal of Addictions Nursing, Volume 17, Issue 4 December 2006 , pages 199 202
Allen, K.D. (2006). Recurrent Pediatric Headaches: Behavioral Concepts and Interventions - JEIBI 3 (2), 211-218 http://www.behavior-analyst-online.org
Yucha, C. & Gilbert, C. (2004) Evidence-Based Practice in Biofeedback and Neurofeedback. Association for Applied Psychophysiology and Biofeedback. Colorado Springs, CO. Effects of an EEG Biofeedback Protocol on a Mixed Substance Abusing Population, William C. Scott, David Kaiser, Siegfried Othmer, and Stephen I. Sideroff, American Journal of Drug and Alcohol Abuse, 31(3), 455-469 (2005)


