Effectiveness of counselling techniques for violent behaviour

There are massive number of people suffering from mental health issues but few of them visit to counsellor for reducing the syndromes. Mental health counsellors have vital role to assist patients of mental disorder or emotional problems. They are well trained to assess, diagnose and treat people fighting with mental health issues such as anxiety, depression, stress, bipolar disorder, eating disorders, schizophrenia, post-traumatic stress disorder or serous emotional state.



Children and adults show violent/aggressive behaviour in some situations that trouble them. Aggression may be a common and thus it may be adaptive in those environments. There are numerous grounds of exhibiting aggressive or violent behavior. The most dominant cause is high negative emotionality leading to low threshold for anger or tolerance for frustration. There are other reasons that trigger aggressive acts. Distorted cognitions may lead to unjustified alarm or erroneous beliefs. High level of anxious feeling may lead to harmful escape or avoidance behaviors. Delayed cognitive or communicative development is also a key cause of aggressive behaviors to show emotions or desires. These factors lead to reactive aggression that respond to perceived hurt, or violation. It includes hitting, biting, kicking and self-injurious behavior.  Persons also shout and show verbal outbursts.

During teenage years, children often display increased rates of school dropout, depression, juvenile delinquency, violent expression, and poor peer relationships. When it takes severe form, they need counselling.

First of all, it is obliging to understand some pointers for violent behaviour and develop personal action plans. It is observed by mental health counsellor that main predictor of violent behaviour is past violent behaviour. If a person has previously showed aggressive behaviour, she or he probably displays such behaviour in social situation. Risk factors that trigger violent behaviour include hostile, suspicious, and agitated behaviour, as well as delusions, hallucinations, and other signs of poor contact with reality.

Psychological studies have established that a child or adult who shows aggressive behaviour has poor impulse control. Therefore, counsellors offer behavioural therapy to explore the cause of the aggressive/violent behaviour and then teach to the patient numerous ways to control the impulses that lead to these behaviours. This therapy also helps the patient to recognise the causes of the aggression and how to avoid them. The therapist may clarify the patient the magnitudes of violent behaviours, especially if the patient is a child.

To roll up the importance of counselling for violent behaviour, it is well comprehended that mental health counsellor can transform the aggressive or violent instinct of a person up to a great extent through the application of behaviour therapy. 

Important: This article is developed through environmental information, academic experience and personal view of writer. Writer is not responsible for any disagreement.

Comments

  1. What if there is a husband and father who has an uncontrollable temper that he probably learned from his uncle he lived from age 10 and up. The man works extremely, extremely hard to provide for his family, and does very well. He thinks his family takes his hard work for granted. And when he gets home, if the house is not clean, if the dishes are not done, if the trash is not taken out, he takes out his anger on his children and wife, by yelling and screaming, and even breaking a chair one time. Other than taking deep breaths, going for a walk, and removing himself from the situation, what are some other ways he can learn to control his rage?

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