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Psychotherapy01:28

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Psychotherapy is a versatile, nonmedical approach aimed at helping individuals address emotional, behavioral, and interpersonal issues to enhance their overall well-being. It can involve one-on-one sessions, couples counseling, or small group discussions with a therapist. The therapeutic process includes various techniques such as open discussion, interpretation of thoughts and behaviors, active listening, positive reinforcement, and role modeling. Psychotherapy aims to support individuals in...
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Related Experiment Video

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Transferring Cognitive Tasks Between Brain Imaging Modalities: Implications for Task Design and Results Interpretation in fMRI Studies
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Recovery and Nonrecovery After Psychotherapy With Transference Interpretation: Two Case Studies.

Alice Marble1, Per Høglend1, Randi Ulberg1

  • 1The authors are with the Department of Psychiatry, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway.

American Journal of Psychotherapy
|July 28, 2018
PubMed
Summary

Transference interpretation (TI) is crucial for recovery in individuals with poor quality of object relations (QOR). However, therapeutic outcomes vary, indicating a need for tailored interventions even within this group.

Keywords:
Case studyPsychodynamicsPsychotherapyTransference interpretation

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Area of Science:

  • Psychotherapy research
  • Clinical psychology
  • Psychoanalytic theory

Background:

  • The First Experimental Study of Transference Interpretation (FEST) investigated long-term effects of TI in a randomized clinical trial.
  • This study examined two case studies of women with poor quality of object relations (QOR) who received TI.

Observation:

  • Both patients had obsessive-compulsive personality disorder; one recovered, the other did not.
  • The non-recovered patient exhibited more negative countertransference, controlling interventions, subthreshold personality disorders, history of abuse, and less motivation/openness.
  • The recovered patient had a more secure, though distant, childhood environment and greater openness to therapy.

Findings:

  • While TI is generally beneficial for poor QOR, not all individuals recover, suggesting therapy needs personalization.
  • Therapist's countertransference and intervention style significantly impacted outcomes.
  • Patient factors like motivation, openness, and co-occurring conditions influenced treatment success.

Implications:

  • Clinical practice should consider individual patient characteristics beyond diagnostic groups for effective TI.
  • Further research is needed to identify specific markers predicting response to TI.
  • Tailoring psychotherapeutic techniques is essential for optimizing outcomes in patients with poor QOR.