Mechanisms of Change in Intensive Short-Term Dynamic Psychotherapy: Systematized Review
Abstract
Objective:
Methods:
Results:
Conclusions:
Proposed Mechanisms of Change in ISTDP
Methods
Results
Study | N | Objective | Design | Measures | Findings |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Abbass et al., 2017 (18)b | 500 | Effects of major unlocking on therapy outcome | Outcome data, open design, no control group | BSI, IIP | Unlocking observed in 25% of patients; major unlocking positively associated with improvements in self-reported symptoms and interpersonal problems in both fragile and psychoneurotic patients; fragile patients had more symptoms at baseline and were less likely to have unlocking. |
Abbass et al., 2008 (33) | 30 (effectiveness group); 5 (intervention-response group) | Effectiveness of a single session of ISTDP for patients on a tertiary psychotherapy service; therapist-patient intervention-response processes | Naturalistic design, no control group, pre-post results, random selection of therapy sessions for study | BSI, IIP, medication use, need for further treatment at 1-month follow-up | Trial therapy reported to be clinically effective and cost-effective in a tertiary setting; 43% had recovery from case criteria as shown through BSI scores; one-third required no further treatment; most commonly used therapist interventions were “pressure” (59%), “linkage” between past-present feelings, anxiety, and defenses (19%), “clarification and challenge” (14%). |
Bernardelli et al., 2002 (27) | 1 | Identify therapist’s response mode or pattern of intervention | Single-case design; mixed quantitative and qualitative data | HCVRCS-R | The bulk of counselor response was characterized by a pattern of four techniques, namely information seeking (46%), providing information (21%), interpretation (17%), and confrontation (10%); ISTDP was observed to use a consistent set of verbal response modes; the combination of these response modes was almost exclusively present in all the sessions examined; frequency of response modes seemed to remain similar in the two earlier sessions with a predominance of interpretation, whereas in the last session provision of information increased; when the therapist functioned at a semantic level, the grammatical structure of the interventions followed statistically significant patterns. |
Callahan, 2000 (36) | 6 | Changes in patients’ resistance and association with outcome | Naturalistic study; six case studies | BEC, BECA, GAF | Resistance decreased from early to late therapy; decrease in resistance marginally correlated with therapeutic improvement (GAF). |
De Stefano et al., 2001 (29) | 1 | Association between therapist response mode and client good moments | Single case | HCVRCS-R, CSCGM | Significant association between therapist verbal responses and subsequent occurrences of client good moments; confrontation and information seeking were associated with the appearance of immediate good moments; interpretation and provision of information were not. |
Fleury et al., 2016 (21)b | 1 | Variations in HRV and RSA during an unlocking phase; physiological responses associated with unlocking | Single case design | HRV, CSI, CVI, RSA | Distinct somatic pathway of rage; activation of sympathetic system during defensive responses associated with anxiety and during the passage of unconscious aggressive impulses; increased vagal tone following the experience of unconscious guilt, corresponding to the phase of reunification. |
Johannson et al., 2014 (19)b | 412 | Effectiveness of ISTDP for patients on a tertiary unit; association between unlocking and outcome | Outcome data, open design; no control group | BSI, IIP | Overall effectiveness of ISTDP supported in a tertiary unit. Patients classified as fragile and/or psychotic had more symptom severity pretreatment and a steeper rate of recovery; average number of sessions provided was 10.2. Professional therapists (vs. trainees) did not seem to conduct more effective treatments; patients with extreme resistance seemed to require major unlocking of the unconscious to benefit. Patients of a single therapist, considered expert in ISTDP, had better outcomes than patients of the other therapists on one of the outcome measures. |
McCullough et al., 1991 (34) | 16 | Association between in-session interactions and patient affective and defensive responses | Case series | SAS; target complaints | Average of 40 sessions; symptom improvement was predicted by an intervention pattern where the therapist made an interpretation of the therapeutic relationship, followed by an affective response from the patient; the same intervention followed by a defensive response had a negative association with symptom outcomes; therapist interventions in isolation (without patient response) did not predict outcome. |
Paserpskytė, 2012 (unpublished) | 4 | Exploration of insight as a potential mediating variable in the relationship between affective experiencing and symptom change | Case series | BDI-II, CORE-OM, WAI, AES, DIS | Insight was not found to play a mediating role in the relationship between affect experiencing and symptom change. |
Salvadori, 2010 (unpublished) | 6 | Associations between affect experiencing, inhibition, working alliance, and distress | Case series | BDI-II, CORE-OM, WAI, AES, DIS | The study found mixed results; two participants showed a reduction in distress associated with increased affective experiencing and working alliance; two patients showed no association between these variables; two participants showed mixed results. |
Stalikas et al., 1997 (32) | 1 | Client good moments/change events | Single case study | CSCGM | Good moments were related to the patient’s provision of information, exploration of feelings, and insight and understanding. In-session behavioral change also was an important component of therapeutic process. |
Town et al., 2013 (20)b | 89 | Association between unlocking and outcome | Quasi-experimental treatment outcome study | BSI, IIP, BDI, BAI, functional gains (frequency of working days and discontinuation of medication); health care costs | Superior effects on self-reported outcomes among patients with major unlocking; functional measures and service utilization posttreatment. |
Town et al., 2017 (37) | 4 | Association between peak affective arousal and change in self-reported symptoms among patients with major depressive disorder | Single case A-B-phase design | BDI-II, CORE-OM, IIP-SC, AES, WAI Client, WAI Therapist | Peak AE associated with reduction in symptoms next session. Increased AE predicted strong therapeutic alliance next session in three cases. Duration of treatment varied among patients. |
Winston et al., 1994 (35) | 28 | Association between patient defenses, therapist interventions to address defenses, and patient outcomes for patients with personality disorders | Correlational design | PICS, target complaints, SCL-90-R, SAS | Significant decrease in overall defensive behaviors over time, although only intermediate defensive behaviors (e.g., intellectualization, reaction-formation) changed; no correlation between frequency of defensive behavior and patient outcome. |
Unlocking the Unconscious
Abbass et al., 2017.
Johansson et al., 2014.
Town et al., 2013.
Fleury et al., 2016.
Interactions Within the Therapist-Patient Dyad
Bernardelli et al., 2002.
De Stefano et al., 2001.
Stalikas et al., 1997.
Abbass et al., 2008.
McCullough et al., 1991.
Winston et al., 1994.
Studies Exploring Underlying Purported ISTDP Hypotheses
Callahan, 2000.
Town et al., 2017.
Salvadori, 2010.
Paserpskytė, 2012.
Discussion
Conclusions
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