Systematic desensitization is a therapeutic procedure designed to help clients overcome anxiety that is disproportionate to the actual situation. The procedure contains four core elements:
- Subjective Units of Discomfort (SUDs): The client learns how to report on a subjective scale how he or she feels when confronted with certain situations.
- Competing Response: The client is taught a response to counteract anxiety [usually relaxation].
- Hierarchy Construction: Feared situations are ordered with respect to the amount of anxiety they elicit.
- Desensitization Proper: The client repeatedly visualizes the feared situations in order of the hierarchy, while he or she performs the competing response.
(cf., Paul, 1969a; Spiegler & Guevremont, 1998; Wolpe, 1982; Wolpe, 1990)
Systematic desensitization requires that the client make known to the therapist his or her discomfort level to various situations related to the problem. One possibility is for the client to make statements such as "a lot" or "very little." Wolpe (1990) questions the value of such verbal descriptions; instead, he advocates the use of a subjective anxiety scale. The scale ranges from zero to 100. The client is told to assign the number zero to an imagined sense of absolute calm and the number 100 to his or her worst anxiety. With these two reference points, the client rates his or her current state. Over time clients become increasingly confident in their subjective assessments. The unit is the SUD (subjective unit of discomfort). In all the tables thus far presented in this tutorial, the numbers listed under the "Anxiety" column are SUD values.
SUD values are not necessarily consistent between clients: a value of 50 for one client may be indicative of more discomfort than it is for another client. Thus, it is not possible to compare comfort levels between clients based on their SUD reports (Spiegler & Guevremont, 1998). What is important is that there is consistency within the reports of a single client: a situation assigned a value of 50 today should produce the same amount of discomfort than a situation assigned a value of 50 yesterday. If so, then SUD values can be more confidently used to assess the efficacy of treatment over time for that client.
Wolpe (1990) presents evidence that scores on this subjective scale correlate well with psychophysiological parameters of anxiety, such as peripheral vasoconstriction and heart rate.
Deep muscle relaxation is typically taught to clients in order to compete with negative emotional reactions engendered by the feared situation. Wolpe's (1990) relaxation procedure, which he adapted in abbreviated form from Jacobson (1938), consumes about a third of a session, takes about six lessons to complete, and requires that clients practice at home twice a day for 10 to 15 minutes. During therapy sessions the client is taught to alternately tense and relax different sets of muscles (arms; face; jaw; eyes; neck and shoulders; back, abdomen and thorax; and legs), and in the process he or she learns to differentiate between feelings of tension and relaxation. Wolpe (1990) advises that while there is no sacred sequence, the one adopted should remain orderly. By the end of training, the client can be brought to a state of deep relaxation using only a brief set of instructions.
Other ways of teaching relaxation include: autogenic training (repeated suggestions of heaviness and warmth), transcendental meditation, yoga, and electromyographic biofeedback (Wolpe, 1990).
The competing response need not be relaxation. Alternative competing responses have included sexual arousal, assertive behaviors, eating, pleasant thoughts, humor, and physical activity (Spiegler & Guevremont, 1998; Wolpe, 1990). Thus, systematic desensitization is still possible for those persons who, despite their and their therapist's best efforts, cannot achieve deep muscle relaxation. Suppose this were true for Nancy. If so, her therapist may choose to try humor as the competing response. He might present scenes to her with details that elicit laughter. For example, while Nancy is picturing herself giving a presentation, her therapist might describe how a particularly serious student in her class is making a funny face at the teacher (cf., Ventis, 1973). Note that Nancy would not have to learn to laugh, which is an advantage of using humor rather than relaxation as the competing response.
While some authors now question the role of relaxation as a critical component in the desensitization process, Wolpe (1990) points out that it was never his view that this particular competing response was indispensable to the success of the procedure.
Around the same time that relaxation training begins, the therapist and client engage in discourse in order to identify situations that make the client feel anxious. Questionnaires may also be employed. For example, Joseph Wolpe uses a Fear Survey Schedule: objects and events that typically elicit unpleasant feelings are listed and the client is asked to rate his or her discomfort level to each one (Wolpe, 1990, Appendix C, Fear Survey Schedule).
Notable fear-producing situations are then classified according to themes and assigned SUD values. Within each theme, the situations are ranked ordered according to these values on what is called an anxiety hierarchy. You have already seen examples of several anxiety hierarchies including that in the case of Nancy. The theme of her hierarchy could be called "fear of speaking in class." Deeper probing into Nancy's problem by her therapist may reveal that not only does she have a "fear of speaking in class," but she also has "fear of being devalued by others." Thus, Nancy and her therapist would likely also formulate another hierarchy based on this second theme. Items might include: "Being awarded a C+ for what she feels is an excellent essay" and "Making a relevant point that is ignored during a discussion within her study group."
Here are some key points to keep in mind about anxiety hierarchies:
After the client has learned deep muscle relaxation (or another competing responses) and has constructed a hierarchy of fears centered on a particular theme, the desensitization procedure begins. The session begins by inducing a deep state of relaxation; then, the therapist asks the client to imagine certain scenes from the hierarchy while maintaining this relaxed state.
Wolpe (1990
THERAPIST: I am now going to ask you to imagine a number of scenes. You will imagine them clearly and they will interfere little, if at all, with your state of relaxation. If, however, at any time you feel disturbed or worried and want to draw my attention, you can tell me so. As soon as a scene is clear in your mind, indicate it by raising your little finger about one inch. First I want you to imagine that you are standing at a familiar street corner on a pleasant morning watching the traffic go by. You see cars, motorcycles, trucks, bicycles, people, and traffic lights; and you hear the sounds associated with all these things.
(After a few seconds the patient raises her left finger. The therapist pauses for five seconds).
THERAPIST: Stop imagining that scene. By how much did it raise your anxiety level while you imagined it?
Mrs. C: Not at all.
THERAPIST: Now give your attention once again to relaxing.
Note that this scene had nothing to do with taking examinations. In fact, it was not even part of Mrs. C's anxiety hierarchy. Why was it presented? Wolpe (1990) calls this a "control" scene. It is purposefully neutral and functions to gauge the client's abilities to visualize and relinquish control.
After a pausing 20-30 seconds with renewed relaxation instructions, the scene lowest on the anxiety hierarchy is presented.
THERAPIST: Now imagine that you are home studying in the evening. It is the 20th May, exactly a month before your examination.
(After about 15 seconds Mrs. C. raises her finger. Again she is left with the scene for 5 seconds.)
THERAPIST: Stop that scene. By how much did it raise your anxiety?
Mrs. C: About 15 units.
THERAPIST: Now imagine that same scene again a month before your examination.
The therapist presents the same scene a few more times until Mrs. C's reported anxiety level is reduced to zero. Then, the scene one higher on the anxiety hierarchy is presented in the same manner, until Mrs. C's reported anxiety level to it is also zero. In this way, the therapist proceeds up the hierarchy, eventually to the most fear-inducing scene. In other words, the therapist presents a new scene only after the client's self-report to the current scene indicates no discomfort (i.e., zero SUD units). If at any point during the visualization of a scene the client becomes extremely anxious, he or she is ordered to stop visualizing and to focus on relaxing.
Therapy sessions should end on a positive note, either with complete desensitization for a particular scene or with very good progress on it (Sarafino, 1996). Each new session starts with the last scene from the previous session for which anxiety was not reduced to zero; if anxiety to the last scene was reduced to zero, then the therapist presents the scene next highest on the hierarchy (Wolpe, 1990) (Others have recommended that each new session begin with the last scene fully desensitized in the previous session: Martin & Pear, 1998; Sarafino, 1996). Throughout the process, a record is kept of all of the client's responses, which helps the therapist monitor the client's progress and ultimately provides an objective measure of the outcome
What is the end result? Martin & Pear (1998) note:
"When the client finishes the last scene is the hierarchy, he/she can generally encounter the actual feared objects without undue distress. No doubt the positive reinforcement that the client receives [perhaps from significant others] then helps maintain continued interactions with the stimuli that previously elicited intense, debilitating fear." (p. 332)
Here are some other general guidelines and quantitative considerations concerning the desensitization procedure.