Uniersity Medical Center Groningen
Universitair Centrum Psychiatrie
Wim Veling is professor of psychiatry, head of the Virtual Reality mental health lab and psychiatrist at University Medical Center Groningen (UMCG), University of Groningen, the Netherlands. His research focuses on contextual mechanisms and innovative treatments of psychosis and other psychiatric disorders, using perspectives of virtual reality, epidemiology and global mental health.

Presenter of 2 Presentations

Con

Session Type
Pharmacology
Date
Sun, 05.06.2022
Session Time
17:00 - 18:30
Room
Hall A
Session Icon
Fully Live, Live Voting
Lecture Time
17:35 - 18:10

Fears, Fun and Voices – an update on VR Treatments for Psychosis

Session Type
Clinical/Therapeutic
Date
Sat, 04.06.2022
Session Time
08:00 - 09:30
Room
On Demand 2
Session Icon
On Demand, Section
Lecture Time
08:20 - 08:40

Abstract

Abstract Body

Background: Virtual Reality (VR) is increasingly used for treatment of psychiatric disorders. With immersive VR, people can be gradually exposed to situations they fear, they can practice new behaviour in a safe and controlled way. The threshold for engaging in therapy is lower in VR than in real life. VR applications for psychosis have been introduced fifteen years ago, and are rapidly expanding.

Methods: In our VR mental health lab, several VR therapies for psychotic disorders have been developed and investigated. Results of recent randomized controlled trials (RCT) will be presented, and ongoing and future projects will be discussed, including VR cognitive behavioral therapy (VRcbt) for paranoid delusions, social cognition training, stress management and avatar therapy for auditory hallucinations

Results: The RCT of VRcbt for paranoid delusions (N=116) had strong and statistically significant effects on paranoid ideations, anxiety and safety behavior. Facial emotion recognition was improved by VR social cognition training (RCT N=81), but other domains of social cognition proved more difficult to improve. A VR relaxation tool (RCT N=50) had strong immediate effects on perceived stress and emotional states. Ongoing VR intervention studies are a modular VR intervention aimed at improving social functioning (VR SOAP) and an empowering intervention for patients with auditory hallucinations (VR VOICES).

Discussion: VR is a powerful tool for treatment of psychotic disorders, offering interventions for multiple symptom domains and functioning. Next generation VR studies hold the promise to expand and substantially improve psychosocial treatment of psychotic disorders.

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