| Literature DB >> 30298032 |
Abstract
Background: Committing to attendance at personal therapy sessions is frequently either mandated or encouraged in many different types of therapeutic trainings across allied health, psychotherapy, social work and counseling. The small number of published accounts have indicated that student experiences of personal therapy can be mixed.Entities:
Keywords: counseling training and education; critical interpretive synthesis; meta-analysis; personal therapy; trainee therapy student experience
Year: 2018 PMID: 30298032 PMCID: PMC6160903 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2018.01732
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
Trainee experiences: summary of papers included in the analysis.
| Ciclitira et al., | Biographical-interpretive | 19 volunteer counselors (F) | Themes –
- personal and professional benefits of personal therapy - challenges of personal therapy, - [understanding] the core ingredients of personal therapy | I am more likely to be able to work with clients' traumatic material and not shut it down as I know these experiences are survivable |
| Ivey and Waldeck, | Unspecified qualitative analysis | 9 intern clinical psychologists (7 Female) | Ethical challenges of Mandatory Personal Therapy (MTP) Evolving attitudes toward MPT; | …we had not been sufficiently informed about the rationale for MPT and had not been given the space to discuss our responses to it |
| Kumari, | Interpretive phenomenological analysis | 8 counseling psychology trainees (7 F) | Experiential learning Personal development The stress of therapy Personal therapy is essential for therapists | The mandatory requirement impacted on the potential to develop a relationship with the therapist, especially in the beginning |
| Moertl et al., | Grounded theory | 10 therapists-in-training at Sigmund Freud Private University (8 F) | Our relationship was so honest and unconditionally supportive at the same time, which allowed me to trust in us and subsequently believe in myself more | I experienced being seen for who I truly am |
| Rizq and Target ( | Interpretive phenomenological analysis | 9 qualified therapists (6 F) | The self-experiences in personal therapy are intense | The therapist's willingness to be real and emotionally open encouraged my emotional development |
| Rizq and Target, | Mixed methods – the qualitative arm relevant to the CIS used IPA | 12 UK qualified counseling psychologists who had practiced for between 3 and 7 years (9 F) | Emotional safety and control | I felt anger and resistance about the mandatory nature of the therapy. This disrupted my ability to engage fully with the therapist (keeping my guard up) |
| So, | Phenomenology | 8 music therapists post training (7 F) | There is a cultural stigma about attending personal therapy in the Asian countries from which the participants originated Personal therapy is a safe place to take difficult feelings – for ex. anger There can be difficulties in therapy – for example feeling pushed | Personal therapy is for me a type of self-care |
| Von Haenisch, | IPA | 6 psychologists post training with between 1 and 6 years' experience in the field (4 F) | The compulsory aspect of personal therapy has an impact on how it is experienced Personal therapy has impact on personal development Personal therapy has impact on professional development | Personal therapy helped me let go of pain caused in the past It represented the first opportunity in my life to open up about personal issues When starting out in therapy during training it felt like we were “ticking the box” or “jumping through hoops” |
| Wilson et al., | Narrative Analysis | 10 female clinical psychologists | The course required attendance at personal therapy | Mandatory therapy – it was like putting a gun to my head |
Themes and the meaning units which informed them.
| Encounters between the therapist and the trainee experienced as difficult cannot easily be addressed | I noticed how even little things the therapist did could be awkward and uncomfortable for me |
| Attending personal therapy was problematic and the course didn't help | It was disappointing that we did not receive information from the course about why personal therapy is needed |
| The support of the therapist was valued and transformative | I loved experiencing the therapist as surrogate parent, or in parental role |
| Personal therapy made it possible to be better informed about client role, and what the client experiences | We need to practice what we preach – going into client role is a way to see many dimensions of practice that are not available simply by learning about it or doing it |
| Personal therapy negatively impacted university, clinical work and other responsibilities | My personal therapy was destabilizing and impacted the therapeutic work with clients – “I felt confused and unstable as a therapist” |
| It was hard work but also valuable to work at a deep level | “The therapist said – go deeper” |
| Personal therapy was helpful in managing university and clinical work | Having concerns about clinical work listened to helped me feel more competent in my clinical practice, as well as the university assignment work |
| The start of therapy was explosive or guarded | In the initial stage - … commencing therapy for me was ‘hard', ‘uncomfortable', and negatively associated with training and assessment |
| Experiences at the beginning and ending of therapy were different | In a further stage of attending therapy – I experienced a more permeable boundary between the course and personal therapy |
| The need for self-knowledge of the therapist was heightened | It became more apparent through attending therapy that the therapist needs to know what is happening for them because they use all of their impressions and experiences in the therapy – if they are not consistently developing their self-awareness it is like “going around blind” |
| Learnings from observing the things the therapist did that were ineffective | I observed some ways that were not helpful (the therapist was too rigid) and I decided that in my own practice I would not be like that |
| Enhanced learnings about the therapeutic role and techniques from the experience of the client; beyond the textbook | MPT enhanced my understanding of the processes and dynamics of psychotherapy, specifically experiences of transference, interpretation, termination, and therapy technique |