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Clinical Case Discussion
Published Online: 6 January 2020

Symptom-Specific Reflective Function as a Potential Mechanism of Interpersonal Psychotherapy Outcome: A Case Report

Highlights

How psychotherapies work is unclear.
Symptom-specific reflective function may explain the effectiveness of interpersonal psychotherapy (and other affect-focused therapies) in treating patients with psychiatric disorders.
Matthew, a 42-year-old gay African American veteran, lived alone. His past depression and posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) had responded to prior psychotherapy. He sought additional treatment after anxiety and depressive symptoms worsened following an incident 6 months earlier. Matthew had gone to a bar with coworkers—a rarity for him—at their encouragement. The bar was in a rough neighborhood, and Matthew felt uncomfortable. He recalled (some details were hazy after drinking) two male coworkers accosting him as he headed to the bathroom several hours into the gathering. The bathroom was secluded, near a rear exit. Hurling homophobic slurs, the men groped Matthew, pushing him outside into a dark, empty parking lot. Matthew was frightened. Interrupted when a police car passed nearby, the assailants retreated inside the building. Matthew fled home.
Matthew quit his job by phone the next day without disclosing why. He did not return coworkers’ phone calls and abruptly withdrew from friends and social activities. He stayed home, playing with his dog, watching TV, halfheartedly applying for jobs, and drinking more than previously. Matthew supported himself on dwindling savings and accepted his stepfather’s financial assistance.
Matthew described a traumatic upbringing. His parents had divorced when he was 5 years old. His mother left him with his father and stepmother for health and financial reasons. His father was distant, and his stepmother was physically and emotionally abusive. In his teens, Matthew returned to live with his mother, who had recovered her health and remarried. Matthew’s stepfather was “a tough love kind of guy.” Although self-identifying as gay as a teen, Matthew hid this identification; his mother and stepfather attended a traditional Baptist church hostile toward homosexuality. When he eventually came out to them, they were accepting, but his sexuality remained a source of tension and unease.
Matthew joined the military at age 18, seeking a better future. Big, strong, and physically fit, Matthew entered an elite unit and rose quickly in rank. During 10 years in the service, he carefully hid his sexual identity from all but a few close friends. During multiple deployments, Matthew experienced combat and traumatic loss and witnessed homophobia: in one upsetting incident, he watched passively as fellow servicemembers mocked and physically mistreated a gay Iraqi national. Matthew developed PTSD symptoms toward the end of his service and was ridiculed in his unit when he sought psychiatric help. He left the military feeling shame and grief, although his depressive and PTSD symptoms improved with time and supportive psychotherapy. The intersection of Matthew’s sexual and military identities—being gay yet feeling he could not be open and had to hide it—may well have heightened his shame.
Upon entering interpersonal psychotherapy (IPT) after the bar incident, Matthew met criteria for severe PTSD and major depressive disorder: his Clinician-Administered PTSD Scale for DSM-5 (CAPS-5) (1) score was 46, and his 17-item Hamilton Depression Rating Scale (HAM-D) (2) score was 23 (Table 1). He reported depressed mood, anhedonia, nightmares, intrusive memories, insomnia, trouble concentrating, avoidance of trauma reminders, hypervigilance, heightened startle reflex, and feeling numb, worthless, guilty, and angry. His re-experiencing symptoms incorporated traumatic military losses, combat, and the bar incident. In his nightmares, people chased and tried to hurt him, and dead military comrades accused him of wasting his life while their lives had been snatched away. Certain smells and sights evoked the bar assault. He drank three to six beers most nights but denied alcohol-related symptoms.
TABLE 1. Assessment scores for a patient with major depression and posttraumatic stress disorder being treated with interpersonal psychotherapy
InstrumentBaselineWeek 4Week 7Week 14
CAPS-5a46 2624
HAM-Db23 179
Reflective functioningc4.54.5 5
SSRFc44.5 5
SCI-SASd    
 Child69 9
 Adult1512 13
a
CAPS-5, Clinician-Administered PTSD Scale for DSM-5. Possible scores range from 0 to 80, with higher scores indicating greater severity; PTSD threshold of 25.
b
HAM-D, Hamilton Depression Rating Scale (17-item version). Possible scores range from 0 to 52, with higher scores indicating greater severity.
c
Reflective Functioning and Symptom-Specific Reflective Functioning (SSRF) scales. Possible scores range from –1 to 9, with higher scores indicating greater reflective function and 5 being the norm in normal populations.
d
SCI-SAS, Structured Clinical Interview for Separation Anxiety Symptoms. Possible scores range from 0 to 32, with higher scores indicating greater separation anxiety.
Large, youthful, pleasant, and soft-spoken, Matthew shrank into his chair, as if trying to occupy less physical space. He spoke quietly, moved without agitation, and made good eye contact. His mood was depressed and anxious, with muted, detached, but reactive affect. His thoughts were goal directed. He denied suicidal and homicidal ideation.
Editor's Note: This article is part of a special issue on interpersonal psychotherapy, guest edited by Frenk Peeters, M.D., Ph.D. Although authors were invited to submit manuscripts for the themed issue, all articles underwent peer review as per journal policies.

Case Discussion

In the 1970s, in developing IPT in the pre-evidence-based era, Gerald L. Klerman, M.D., famously asked, “If a treatment doesn’t help, who cares how it works?” (3). Accordingly, during more than 40 years of subsequent research, studies of IPT have focused more on treatment outcomes than on its processes. IPT efficacy is now well established for mood (4) and eating disorders (5), with encouraging if lesser support for PTSD (6) and anxiety disorders (7). The question facing IPT, and all evidence-based psychotherapies today, has become, What specific mechanisms bring about symptomatic change?
Psychotherapy mediation factors are generally understudied, and only limited IPT process-outcome literature exists (e.g., 8). Researchers have struggled to find appropriate mechanistic measures for IPT, partly because IPT process research has been limited. IPT’s clinical focus resides in the interpersonal—in helping patients to understand and better negotiate social interactions, mobilize social support, and improve interpersonal functioning (9). Yet interpersonally focused assessments (1012) have yielded underwhelming results. None addresses the core interpersonal skill inherent in the IPT treatment process and patient functioning at the level of the interpersonal encounter.
Our search for such an instrument led to core attachment dysregulation, which plays a formative role in the development of an interpersonal world (13). The Reflective Functioning (RF) Scale (14), derived by Fonagy and colleagues from the Adult Attachment Inventory (AAI) (15), assesses aspects of attachment dysregulation and the ability to mentalize (i.e., to reflect on the emotional aspects of one’s life, on one’s understandings of relationships with core attachment figures, and on oneself) (16). This measure seems a promising fit for IPT. RF measures one’s ability to understand one’s own and others’ feelings and perceptions of attachment relationships—the core backdrops of any interpersonal encounter and a potential missing mechanism link in IPT research. In helping patients to understand that their feelings are not dangerous but instead provide informative cues to interpersonal encounters, IPT would be expected to improve RF before patients make the interpersonal changes needed to resolve a role dispute, role transition, or other interpersonal crisis (17). Yet RF, capturing aspects of global ego functioning, may change too gradually to yield measurable differences in a brief psychotherapy. Hence Rudden et al. (18) developed the Symptom-Specific Reflective Functioning (SSRF) Scale, paralleling the RF scale, to assess patients’ understanding of their psychological symptoms. For example, symptomatic patients with panic attacks might attribute their panic to external causes (“I get my panic attacks from red bell peppers” rates a low SSRF score), whereas a patient who more deeply understands the symptoms’ emotional underpinnings might say, “I realize that since my daughter got into college and is about to leave home, I wake up almost every day with a sense of rising panic in the pit of my stomach. I’m going to have to deal with this loss!” Recent research has applied the RF and SSRF scales as change measures, potential assessment tools for moderators and mediators in outcome studies (19).
Rudden et al. (20) found that among patients with panic disorder, SSRF, but not RF, improved during panic-focused psychodynamic psychotherapy (PFPP) (21), which, like IPT, is an affect-focused time-limited treatment, but not in applied relaxation, a cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT). Ekeblad et al. (22) reported that IPT, but not CBT, improved RF rated on AAI for depressed patients. SSRF has been reported to improve more with PFPP than with CBT (20), and SSRF improvement across both treatments has been shown to lead to subsequent improvement in panic symptoms (19). We are conducting an open 14-week trial of IPT for patients with PTSD to explore whether improvement in SSRF precedes improvement on the CAPS-5 (1). Here, we use a case example to illustrate this concept.

Methods

This case discussion comes from our ongoing open clinical trial in the New York-Presbyterian Military Family Wellness Center (MFWC) at Columbia University Irving Medical Center/New York State Psychiatric Institute (NYSPI). The MFWC provides no-cost psychiatric treatment to veterans and military family members in a non–Veterans Administration setting (23). Eligible patients with PTSD may choose IPT for PTSD (24) from among other treatments and sign informed consent for this protocol, which was approved by the NYSPI institutional review board. The protocol entails RF and SSRF interviews at weeks 0, 4, and week 14 termination, with standard symptom measures (i.e., CAPS-5 and HAM-D) (2) at weeks 0, 7, and 14. Patients receive $50 compensation for completing the three RF and/or SSRF interviews. We hypothesized that SSRF score would improve (at week 4) before CAPS-5 score (at weeks 7 and 14).
The semistructured RF interviews prompt the patient to describe a key relationship with a parent, changes in that relationship over time, and the impact the patient feels the relationship has had. The SSRF interviews focus on the affective dysregulation characteristic of PTSD. The patient is asked, “Have you experienced alterations in overall intensity of your emotions in your daily life? Specifically, have you had experiences of numbing and/or heightened emotional states?” (20) The interviews are audio taped, transcribed, and scored by trained, reliable raters. The RF and SSRF scales, scored like the AAI (15), range from –1 (bizarre, not at all reflective) to 9 (extremely reflective), with 5 as a normative score, based on the emotional depth of the patient’s understanding (19).
We are recruiting 25 completed IPT-PTSD cases to test for possible attachment-based mechanisms in IPT. IPT for PTSD (24) follows basic IPT principles, with adaptations including an early focus on affective attunement in numb PTSD patients and on using anger to confront others in order to determine their trustworthiness. This case vignette serves as an illustration of improvement in SSRF as a potential mechanism of IPT outcome.

Initial Sessions

Matthew agreed to participate in 14 weekly IPT sessions. The therapist took an interpersonal inventory (5). Matthew recalled vague, fond memories of early years with his mother and unhappiness at moving to his father and stepmother’s at age 7. His parents had never discussed these moves with him or asked about his feelings. Matthew stated, very casually, that his stepmother frequently hit him with a hairbrush or kitchen utensil, often drawing blood; his father turned a blind eye on the rare occasions he witnessed this behavior. Matthew’s stepmother belittled him and complained bitterly about having to care for him. Matthew happily returned to his mother at age 12, but again, no one ever discussed the reasons for or his reactions to moving, nor did Matthew expect such discussion.
The therapist asked Matthew to whom he turned when angry or sad. Matthew responded with a quizzical look. He described avoiding drawing attention to himself and taking care never to upset or burden parental figures. He acknowledged anger toward his stepmother for hurting him and toward his father for not protecting him, but he quickly defended his mother: “Well, she had her own problems and I understand she couldn’t manage me—I was not the easiest kid.” The therapist, mildly incredulous, wondered about this statement and about why Matthew never told his mother about the physical abuse. “What could she have done, anyway?” Matthew shrugged. He resisted the therapist’s attempts to probe his justification for his mother’s abandonment, demonstrating his discomfort with feeling disappointed in her.
Matthew described scarce social relationships growing up, always feeling different because of his size and sexual orientation. He was teased in elementary school for being fat and in adolescence for being awkward and shy. In his later teens, Matthew lost weight and gained muscle. Peers no longer teased him, but he still struggled to form friendships. (The therapist’s suggestion that Matthew was slow to trust elicited another shrug.) Attracted to boys, he too feared rejection or discovery to initiate contact.
In the military, Matthew’s social life improved. He found acceptance and admiration: his work ethic, dedication, and care for others earned him popularity. These relationships faded following exposure to combat trauma, traumatic loss, and consequent depression and PTSD. Matthew felt criticized and shunned for his “weakness” and decision to seek help. He wistfully described his final years in service. Military service had held great meaning and provided close friendships until then. Matthew had quietly experimented with romantic relationships in his early military years when opportunities arose, but he stopped when he became depressed. During his previous psychotherapy, he had experimented with longer-term relationships, but none had lasted. In a repeating pattern, he would do everything for his partners, who did not reciprocate his devotion to the relationship and eventually left or cheated on him. Ashamed, Matthew admitted maintaining contact with one ex-boyfriend who had betrayed him and whom he recently had helped move when asked. The therapist gently reflected that it was curious Matthew spent so much of his life trying to care for and please others—his mother, military superiors, romantic partners—often at a cost to his own needs and desires. Matthew shrugged, “I like to help other people. But yeah, I’ve been told before that I need to look out for myself.”
In session 3, the therapist established the treatment focus, emphasizing that PTSD and depression were treatable medical disorders, not Matthew’s fault, and explained his social withdrawal and functional impairment, connecting them to Matthew’s comment about not looking out for himself. He suggested that Matthew faced a role transition; he had done well until a trauma disrupted his life. The bar incident had re-opened old wounds, resurfacing lingering problems that previous treatment had not fully addressed, leaving him vulnerable to re-traumatization and symptom relapse. The therapist suggested focusing the remaining sessions on Matthew reconnecting to his feelings and using them to understand and negotiate social interactions in order to improve his mood and symptoms. Without assigning formal homework, the therapist would encourage Matthew to try out options they discussed. Matthew amiably agreed.

Middle Sessions

Answering the initial question, “How have things been since we last met?” Matthew reported feeling depressed and struggling to find a job while enduring pressure from his stepfather, who constantly harangued him to get work. The therapist agreed Matthew’s mood reflected current circumstances and asked about Matthew’s interactions with his stepfather. Matthew explained, “I can’t really blame him. I know he’s trying to help me. He’s been giving me money and he’s frustrated.” Opening his phone, Matthew read his stepfather’s excoriating texts verbatim: “You need to get off your [expletive] ass and go out there! You only applied to one place yesterday, that’s complete [expletive]!” The therapist asked Matthew how he felt reading these messages. Matthew said he tried to ignore them, only responding when he could no longer delay. The therapist pressed: “How do the messages make you feel?” Squirming, Matthew admitted they bothered him.
“Bother you?” the therapist asked.
“Yeah. Okay. I mean, they make me really upset. I hate how he talks to me. But I don’t know what to do! I mean, he’s trying to help me and I need his help, but. . .”
“But these messages make you mad. Can you say more about that?”
Matthew gradually acknowledged, in this and subsequent sessions, that his stepfather’s messages hurt his feelings and made him feel much worse. He felt his stepfather neither understood nor respected his mental health challenges, which reminded him of when he left the military, belittled for being “weak.” Brushing away tears, Matthew complained that everything could be so different if his stepfather only spoke to him kindly. Gently, the therapist noted the tears, observing that Matthew felt strongly about this. Matthew nodded. “And yet,” the therapist observed, “it took quite some effort to say this.” Matthew nodded again. “I guess I’m not used to talking about my feelings. Nobody really ever asked me these kinds of questions.”
Subsequently, in discussing the text messages, the therapist asked Matthew if his anger made sense. Matthew struggled, stating his stepfather had good reason to be frustrated with him. The therapist challenged this comment, asking if his stepfather had the right to address him however he pleased and whether sending such texts was okay.
“No, no, of course not.”
“Then, why doesn’t your anger make sense? What does your stepfather being mad have to do with your own feelings?”
Matthew described how shameful it felt to accept his stepfather’s help; in reading the messages, he often felt his stepfather was right about Matthew’s laziness and selfishness, meaning he shouldn’t feel angry or sad. “That sounds like the PTSD and depression talking,” the therapist offered. “Of course, you’re not expected to be at your peak when you’re ill. But it’s not your fault you’re struggling and doesn’t mean you’re not trying your best. Actually, knowing how you’re feeling—and figuring out how to communicate your feelings effectively—should help you feel much better.” The therapist suggested he “live dangerously” and try tolerating and acting on his feelings.
By session 5, Matthew was identifying feelings more quickly and dismissing them more slowly. He more readily linked the week’s events to his feelings, and he more openly considered that others in his life, not just his stepfather, were not treating him as he desired. Matthew noted having helped many friends in times of need but that these friends were absent during his own struggles. He acknowledged feeling uncomfortable asking for help or requesting attention but agreed he might feel better having more support. When asked what made requesting help so uncomfortable, he explained, “Everyone has their own problems. I hate to think someone’s inconveniencing themselves for me.”
“Really? Why?” the therapist asked.
“I don’t know. I just. . . I don’t know.”
“Isn’t that what friends do for each other? Why is it okay for you to help others, but not for them to help you?”
“I know that makes sense. But it doesn’t feel that way.”
“What does it feel like?”
“I don’t know. Like somehow, I don’t deserve it. Like I haven’t earned it. Like I’m not good enough,” Matthew said, tears running down his face. Strikingly, he no longer attempted to hide the tears or change subjects. The therapist nodded.
In the following weeks, they explored his reluctance to confront others. The therapist gave more-explicit and connected feedback, attempting to evoke Matthew’s curiosity about himself. The therapist wondered aloud how curious it was that despite mistreatment by his mother, stepfather, romantic partners, supervisors, and coworkers, Matthew remained unfailingly considerate of everyone’s feelings.
“Everyone’s feelings but my own, you mean,” Matthew acknowledged ruefully.
“Yes.”
“It’s funny. I mean, people see me as a big guy, maybe they think I’m really tough. But, actually, I feel scared all the time. Like I never want to upset anyone or be too upset myself.”
“Why not?”
“I guess I’m afraid of people being mad at me. Maybe I don’t want them to see weakness they can take advantage of.”
In session 8, Matthew, downcast and upset, reported spontaneously confronting his stepfather during dinner. He described his stepfather again yelling and berating him, his mother saying nothing, his feeling humiliated and angry. Matthew stood and yelled at his stepfather that he never listened, didn’t understand what depression felt like, and always made him feel worthless.
“Wow, Matthew! That’s certainly different. What was that like for you?”
“Not so good,” Matthew responded grimly. His stepfather grew angrier and also rose, demanding Matthew explain himself, yelling about how ungrateful he was.
“Oh, no. I’m sorry to hear that. What did you do?”
Matthew had sat back in his chair, silent, trying to restrain tears, and waited for his stepfather to stop. The family then continued the meal as though nothing had happened. He returned home feeling extremely depressed.
The therapist gave Matthew positive feedback, encouragement, and sympathy. He applauded Matthew’s efforts and commiserated with his sense that speaking up had not worked. Having explored Matthew’s feelings—anger and sadness—and whether these feelings made sense to Matthew, which they did, the therapist asked, “What are your options?” Matthew considered never speaking to his stepfather again, apologizing, and yelling at him. With some guidance, Matthew settled on having a conversation to express himself to his stepfather. He and the therapist role-played this situation. They discussed the benefits of expressing angry feelings before they reach the blow-up stage, and of speaking up “even if you don’t get what you want.”
Matthew did not directly confront his stepfather again. He began setting limits, however, no longer responding to irritating texts and texting his stepfather that he didn’t want to be addressed insultingly. Matthew’s mood improved. He re-engaged socially. He incrementally began telling friends about his depression and that he needed them to persist more in trying to reach him, that their distance bothered him. Seemingly reflecting his increasing comfort with his feelings and in taking more active roles in relationships, Matthew applied more aggressively for work and spoke more hopefully about the future. He reported doing so for his own benefit, wanting to establish his own future without feeling subjugated by his stepfather. By session 12, Matthew had secured a job, ended his stepfather’s financial assistance, and reconnected with friends. He felt much better.

Final Sessions

The final two sessions focused on consolidating gains and furthering progress. Matthew reported great improvement, which was reflected in symptom measures: his CAPS-5 score had dropped from 46 to 24, and his HAM-D score from 23 to 9. PTSD symptoms remained significant but had decreased from severe to moderate; his depressive scores were minimal. He reported drinking less. Feeling more confident and capable, Matthew talked enthusiastically about pursuing a new romantic relationship he intended to handle differently by asserting his needs and setting appropriate limits. Reflecting on treatment, Matthew said: “I think I thought, not that I deserved what happened to me exactly, but that I shouldn’t expect anything better. I like helping other people, but I don’t think I understood I can be a nice person without being taken advantage of.” The therapist responded that Matthew had perforce acted agreeable and compliant as a mistreated and abandoned child, a coping strategy that had helped him avoid danger, but that as an adult he had broader options. Matthew agreed, saying he planned to continue practicing everything he had learned. Before an emotional, engaged goodbye, Matthew reported feeling much less guilty about the past and optimistic about the future.

SSRF Improvement as a Potential Mediator of IPT Outcome

Table 1 shows Matthew’s progress on symptom scales, RF, SSRF, and the Structured Clinical Interview for Separation Anxiety Symptoms (SCI-SAS), which measures childhood and adult separation anxiety: total score ≥8 indicates separation anxiety disorder (25). Matthew’s SSRF improvement (at week 4), which eventually normalized, anticipated subsequent (at weeks 7 and 14) CAPS-5 and HAM-D improvement, as hypothesized. (The rating schedule in this underfunded study, however, could not preclude that clinical improvement may have already occurred by week 4). Matthew’s RF improved, as did his separation anxiety score, although it remained elevated. The improved scores appeared clinically meaningful, reflecting the broadened emotional understanding and interpersonal changes Matthew made during treatment. Whether, as in this case, change in SSRF score generally predicts PTSD outcome in IPT will be clarified in the results of our larger trial.

References

1.
Weathers FW, Blake DD, Schnurr PP, et al: The Clinician-Administered PTSD Scale for DSM-5 (CAPS-5), 2013. Interview available from the National Center for PTSD at https://www.ptsd.va.gov/professional/assessment/adult-int/caps.asp
2.
Hamilton M: A rating scale for depression. J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry 1960; 23:56–62
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Markowitz JC, Skodol AE, Bleiberg K: Interpersonal psychotherapy for borderline personality disorder: possible mechanisms of change. J Clin Psychol 2006; 62:431–444
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Cuijpers P, Geraedts AS, van Oppen P, et al: Interpersonal psychotherapy for depression: a meta-analysis. Am J Psychiatry 2011; 168:581–592
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Weissman MM, Markowitz JC, Klerman GL: The Guide to Interpersonal Psychotherapy. New York, Oxford University Press, 2018
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Markowitz JC, Petkova E, Neria Y, et al: Is exposure necessary? A randomized clinical trial of interpersonal psychotherapy for PTSD. Am J Psychiatry 2015; 172:430–440
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Information & Authors

Information

Published In

Go to American Journal of Psychotherapy
Go to American Journal of Psychotherapy
American Journal of Psychotherapy
Pages: 35 - 40
PubMed: 31902227

History

Received: 25 June 2019
Revision received: 18 October 2019
Accepted: 6 November 2019
Published online: 6 January 2020
Published in print: March 01, 2020

Keywords

  1. Posttraumatic stress disorder
  2. interpersonal psychotherapy
  3. symptom-specific reflective function
  4. time-limited psychotherapy
  5. major depressive disorder
  6. affective disorders

Authors

Affiliations

John C. Markowitz, M.D. [email protected]
Department of Psychiatry, Columbia University Vagelos College of Physicians & Surgeons, New York (Markowitz, Lowell, Neria); New York State Psychiatric Institute, New York (Markowitz, Lowell, Lopez-Yianilos, Neria); Department of Psychiatry, Weill Medical College, Cornell University, New York (Milrod).
Ari Lowell, Ph.D.
Department of Psychiatry, Columbia University Vagelos College of Physicians & Surgeons, New York (Markowitz, Lowell, Neria); New York State Psychiatric Institute, New York (Markowitz, Lowell, Lopez-Yianilos, Neria); Department of Psychiatry, Weill Medical College, Cornell University, New York (Milrod).
Barbara L. Milrod, M.D.
Department of Psychiatry, Columbia University Vagelos College of Physicians & Surgeons, New York (Markowitz, Lowell, Neria); New York State Psychiatric Institute, New York (Markowitz, Lowell, Lopez-Yianilos, Neria); Department of Psychiatry, Weill Medical College, Cornell University, New York (Milrod).
Andrea Lopez-Yianilos, Psy.D.
Department of Psychiatry, Columbia University Vagelos College of Physicians & Surgeons, New York (Markowitz, Lowell, Neria); New York State Psychiatric Institute, New York (Markowitz, Lowell, Lopez-Yianilos, Neria); Department of Psychiatry, Weill Medical College, Cornell University, New York (Milrod).
Yuval Neria, Ph.D.
Department of Psychiatry, Columbia University Vagelos College of Physicians & Surgeons, New York (Markowitz, Lowell, Neria); New York State Psychiatric Institute, New York (Markowitz, Lowell, Lopez-Yianilos, Neria); Department of Psychiatry, Weill Medical College, Cornell University, New York (Milrod).

Notes

Send correspondence to Dr. Markowitz ([email protected]).

Funding Information

This research was supported by the Fund for Psychoanalytic Research (Dr. Markowitz). The New York-Presbyterian Military Family Wellness Clinic is funded by the New York-Presbyterian Hospital, Stand for the Troops Foundation, the Bob Woodruff Foundation, and the New York State Psychiatric Institute. ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT02645929.The authors have confirmed that details of the case have been disguised to protect the privacy of the patient described.Dr. Markowitz receives book royalties from American Psychiatric Association Publishing, Basic Books, and Oxford University Press. Dr. Markowitz and Dr. Neria receive salary support from New York State Psychiatric Institute. Dr. Milrod receives support from a fund in the New York Community Trust established by DeWitt Wallace. The other authors report no financial relationships with commercial interests.

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