Literature DB >> 11109577

Varieties of long-term outcome among patients in psychoanalysis and long-term psychotherapy. A review of findings in the Stockholm Outcome of Psychoanalysis and Psychotherapy Project (STOPP).

R Sandell1, J Blomberg, A Lazar, J Carlsson, J Broberg, J Schubert.   

Abstract

This paper reports the main findings of a large-scale study of subsidized psychoanalysis and long-term psychotherapy. More than 400 people in various phases, before, during and after subsidized psychoanalysis or long-term psychodynamic psychotherapy, were followed up for a period of three years with personal interviews, questionnaires and official statistics. Our analyses revealed progressive improvement the longer patients were in treatment--impressively strong among patients in psychoanalysis--on self-rating measures of symptom distress and morale. Improvement, however, was equally weak in both groups on a self-rating measure of social relations. Dosage factors (treatment duration and session frequency in combination) partly accounted for the outcome differences between those referred to psychoanalysis and those referred to long-term psychotherapy. Attitudes and ideals among therapists and analysts concerning the goals and means of psychotherapy were also associated with patient outcome, although in rather complex ways. A significant part of the outcome differences between patients in psychoanalysis and in psychotherapy could be explained by the adoption, in a large group of therapists, of orthodox psychoanalytic attitudes that seemed to be counterproductive in the practice of psychotherapy but not in psychoanalysis. It is suggested that this effect may be a negative transfer of the psychoanalytic stance into psychotherapeutic practice and that this may be especially pronounced when the attitudes are not backed up by psychoanalytic training.

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Year:  2000        PMID: 11109577     DOI: 10.1516/0020757001600291

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Psychoanal        ISSN: 0020-7578


  9 in total

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5.  Dropout from outpatient mental health care in the United States.

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Authors:  S Nolte; L Erdur; H F Fischer; M Rose; B Palmowski
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Review 8.  Moving Forward While Standing Still: A Case of Mental Health Advocacy Evolving in the Time of COVID-19.

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9.  Affect regulation in psychoanalytic treatments of patients with a borderline personality disorder-psychoanalysis and psychodynamic psychotherapy-a comparison.

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Journal:  World J Psychiatry       Date:  2021-12-19
  9 in total

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