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Chapter 12. Applications of Individual Interpersonal Psychotherapy to Specific DisordersEfficacy and Indications

John C. Markowitz, M.D.; Myrna M. Weissman, Ph.D.
DOI: 10.1176/appi.books.9781585623648.370623

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Interpersonal psychotherapy (IPT) was developed in the 1970s by the late Gerald L. Klerman, M.D., Myrna M. Weissman, Ph.D., and their colleagues at Harvard and Yale universities (Weissman 2006). From its inception, IPT was a research therapy. Moreover, whereas much of psychotherapy research before IPT was on the process of psychotherapy, IPT research has focused on the outcome of treatment. As Gerald Klerman would remark, "Who cares why a therapy works if we don't know that it works?" IPT has been tested in a series of randomized controlled trials (RCTs), generally with success. Indeed, for many years IPT was essentially only a research treatment, with few practitioners in the community. Now, because of its success in research studies, IPT has been included as an indicated treatment in numerous guidelines for mood and eating disorders (Agency for Health Care Policy and Research 1993; American Psychiatric Association 2006; "Practice Guideline for Major Depressive Disorder in Adults" 1993). Clinicians are increasingly seeking training because of its empirically demonstrated efficacy. A new manual geared to clinicians describes how to conduct IPT (Weissman et al. 2007). Older manuals describe the efficacy and empirical basis in greater detail (Klerman et al. 1984; Weissman et al. 2000).

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