English Articles and Papers

Allan Abbass:The Emergence of Psychodynamic Psychotherapy for Treatment Resistant Patients: Intensive Short-Term Dynamic Psychotherapy

Downloadicon
Published
2016
Titel
The Emergence of Psychodynamic Psychotherapy for Treatment Resistant Patients: Intensive Short-Term Dynamic Psychotherapy
Autor des Artikels, Dokumentes
Publikation
Psychodynamic Psychiatry, 44(2) 245–280, 2016 © 2016 The American Academy of Psychoanalysis and Dynamic Psychiatry
Summary

Intensive short-term dynamic psychotherapy (ISTDP) was developed out of the need for relatively short psychodynamic psychotherapeutic treatment approaches to complex and resistant patient populations so common in public health systems. Based on extensive study of video recordings, Habib Davanloo discovered, and other researchers have validated, some important clinical ingredients that align the therapist with healthy aspects of the patient striving for resolution of chronic neurotic disorders and fragile character structure. In the case of character neurotic highly resistant patients, these approaches including "pressure," "clarification," "challenge to defenses," and "head on collision" can be used in a tailored and properly timed way to help the chronically suffering patient to overcome his or her own resistance and access core drivers of these pathologies. In this article the meta-psychological basis of ISTDP is reviewed and illustrated with an extended case vignette.

Ruedi Bleuler : Twin-Factors of Resistance and Transference in major Mobilisation of the Unconscious and Intensive Short-Term-Dynamic Psychotherapy

Downloadicon
Downloadable File
Published
2011
Titel
Twin-Factors of Resistance and Transference in major Mobilisation of the Unconscious and Intensive Short-Term-Dynamic Psychotherapy
Autor des Artikels, Dokumentes
Publikation
Revised manuscript for my talk 32 nd annual Metapsychology Program by H. Davanloo
Summary

These two examples underline the central importance of the unconscious therapeutic alliance in the overcoming of the resistances. This presentation is focussing on the question how to mobilize the unconscious therapeutic alliance against the forces of the resistances. Of course, this is a wide focus, and I will have to narrow it on a few issues.

Jon Frederickson, MSW : Introduction to ISTDP

Downloadicon
Downloadable File
Published
2012
Titel
Introduction to ISTDP
Autor des Artikels, Dokumentes
Summary
Our purpose: alleviating human suffering to build healthier communities. Our goal: people achieving their full potential through training, supervision, and intensive short-term dynamic psychotherapy Our values: personal integrity, commitment to excellence, and compassion for self and others.

A. Abbass, D. Lovas & A. Purdy : Direct diagnosis and management of emotional factors in chronic headache patients

Downloadicon
Downloadable File
Published
2008
Titel
Direct diagnosis and management of emotional factors in chronic headache patients
Autor des Artikels, Dokumentes
Publikation
Blackwell Publishing Ltd Cephalalgia, 2008
Summary

Somatization, anxiety, depression and personality disorders are common features of many patients with chronic headaches. Intensive short-term dynamic psychotherapy (ISTDP) is a brief therapy method developed specifically to treat patients with this cluster of somatic problems, symptoms and maladaptive behaviours through focusing on how the patient handles emotional experiences. It also contains a direct method of assessing the somatic discharge pathways of both emotions and anxiety, thus allowing direct observation of somatization in the case of many chronic headache sufferers. In this review, we summarize the extant literature on emotional factors in headache, review the evidence for short-term dynamic therapies in somatic problems and describe the assessment and treatment method of ISTDP we use routinely with chronic headache sufferers.

Allan Abbass, MD : IDEALIZATION AND DEVALUATION AS BARRIERS TO PSYCHOTHERAPY LEARNING

Downloadicon
Downloadable File
Published
2004
Titel
IDEALIZATION AND DEVALUATION AS BARRIERS TO PSYCHOTHERAPY LEARNING
Autor des Artikels, Dokumentes
Publikation
AD HOC BULLETIN OF SHORT-TERM DYNAMIC PSYCHOTHERAPY – PRACTICE AND THEORY. Vol. 8, No. 3 September 2004.
Summary

In the following review the author describes, from his experience, how behaviors including idealization, devaluation and splitting may obstruct the learning of specific psychotherapy methods such as Intensive Short-Term Dynamic Psychotherapy (ISTDP). A working definition of idealization/devaluation and the problems that occur when it becomes entrenched in trainees or in training programs is described. It is hoped that this paper will stimulate reflection and discussion among psychotherapy students and teachers.

Tags / Keywords

Robert Johansson 1,2, Joel M. Town 1 and Allan Abbass : Davanloo’s Intensive Short-Term Dynamic Psychotherapy in a tertiary psychotherapy service: overall effectiveness and association between unlocking the unconscious and outcome

Downloadicon
Downloadable File
Published
2014
Titel
Davanloo’s Intensive Short-Term Dynamic Psychotherapy in a tertiary psychotherapy service: overall effectiveness and association between unlocking the unconscious and outcome
Autor des Artikels, Dokumentes
Publikation
Johansson et al. (2014), PeerJ, DOI 10.7717/peerj.548
Summary

Background. Intensive Short-Term Dynamic Psychotherapy (ISTDP), as developed by Habib Davanloo, is an intensive emotion-focused psychodynamic therapy with an explicit focus on handling resistance in treatment. A core assumption in ISTDP is that psychotherapeutic effects are dependent on in-session emotional processing in the form of rise in complex transference feelings that occurs when treatment resistance is challenged. Recent research indicates that an unlocking of the unconscious, a powerful emotional breakthrough achieved at a high rise in complex transference feelings, can potentially enhance ISTDP’s effectiveness. While ISTDP has a growing evidence base, most of the research conducted has used small samples and has tested therapy delivered by expert therapists. The aims of this study were to evaluate the overall effectiveness of ISTDP when delivered in a tertiary psychotherapy service, and to investigate if having an unlocking of the unconscious during therapy predicted enhanced treatment effectiveness.

 

Jon Frederickson, MSW : ISTDP with a Patient Suffering from Longstanding Severe Somatic Complaints

Downloadicon
Downloadable File
Published
2011
Titel
ISTDP with a Patient Suffering from Longstanding Severe Somatic Complaints
Autor des Artikels, Dokumentes
Publikation
in the Ad Hoc Journal of Short Term Dynamic Psychotherapy. Copyright 2011 Institute for ISTDP Training and Research, Ltd. www.istdpinstitute.com
Summary
The following transcript is the initial session with a 52 year old man who sought treatment for a variety of somatic complaints which had recently increased in intensity. This session has been chosen because it illustrates a nearly complete remission of the patient’s symptoms following two breakthroughs of the sadistic impulse, guilt, and grief into consciousness and de-repression of oedipal conflicts.

Abbass, Allan A. Town, Joel M. : Key clinical processes in Intensive Short-term Dynamic Psychotherapy

Downloadicon
Downloadable File
Published
2013
Titel
Key clinical processes in Intensive Short-term Dynamic Psychotherapy
Autor des Artikels, Dokumentes
Summary
is a modified brief treatment with growing empirical support for its effectiveness with clients with psychoneurotic disorders and character pathology. This model describes key empirically-derived processes which can bring ready access to unprocessed unconscious emotions which otherwise perpetuate widespread symptom and behavioral disorders. Herein we describe the metapsychological underpinnings, clinical application and evidence for central interventions used in ISTDP through the use of a case example.
Key words: short-term, psychodynamic, psychotherapy, emotion

Allan Abbass, MD, Joel Town, DClinPsych, and Ellen Driessen, MSc : ISTDP: A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis of Outcome Research

Downloadicon
Downloadable File
Published
2012
Titel
ISTDP: A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis of Outcome Research
Autor des Artikels, Dokumentes
Publikation
(HARV REV PSYCHIATRY 2012;20:97–108.)
Summary
Habib Davanloo has spent his career developing and teaching methods to accelerate dynamic psychotherapy, including his technique of intensive short-term dynamic psychotherapy (ISTDP). Over the past 20 years, outcome studies using this treatment have been conducted and published. We per- formed a systematic review of the literature to obtain studies presenting ISTDP outcome data. We found 21 studies (10 controlled, and 11 uncontrolled) reporting the effects of ISTDP in patients with mood, anxiety, personality, and somatic disorders. Using the random-effects model, we performed meta-analyses including 13 of these studies and found pre- to post-treatment effect sizes (Cohen’s d) ranging from 0.84 (interpersonal problems) to 1.51 (depression). Post-treatment to follow-up effect sizes suggested that these gains were maintained at follow-up. Based on post-treatment effect sizes, ISTDP was significantly more efficacious than control conditions (d = 1.18; general psychopathology measures). Study quality was highly variable, and there was significant heterogeneity in some analyses. Eight studies using various measures suggested ISTDP was cost-effective. Within limitations of study methodologies, this evidence supports the application of ISTDP across a broad range of populations. Further rigorous and targeted research into this method is warranted.

Allan Abbass Stephen Kisely Kurt Kroenke : Short-Term Psychodynamic Psychotherapy for Somatic Disorders

Downloadicon
Downloadable File
Published
2009
Titel
Short-Term Psychodynamic Psychotherapy for Somatic Disorders
Autor des Artikels, Dokumentes
Publikation
Psychother Psychosom 2009;78:265–274 DOI: 10.1159/000228247
Summary

Background: Somatic symptom disorders are common, dis- abling and costly. Individually provided short-term psy- chodynamic psychotherapies (STPP) have shown promising results. However, the effectiveness of STPP for somatic symp- tom disorders has not been reviewed. Methods: We under- took a systematic review of randomized controlled trials and controlled before and after studies. The outcomes included psychological symptoms, physical symptoms, social-occupational function, healthcare utilization and treatment continuation. Results: A total of 23 studies met the inclusion criteria and covered a broad range of somatic disorders. Thirteen were RCTs and 10 were case series with pre-post outcome assessment. Of the included studies, 21/23 (91.3%), 11/12 (91.6%), 16/19 (76.2%) and 7/9 (77.8%) reported significant or possible effects on physical symptoms, psychological symptoms, social-occupational function and healthcare utilization respectively. Meta-analysis was possible for 14 studies and revealed significant effects on physical symp- toms, psychiatric symptoms and social adjustment which were maintained in long-term follow-up. Random-effect modeling attenuated some of these relationships. There was a 54% greater treatment retention in the STPP group versus controls. Conclusion: STPP may be effective for a range of medical and physical conditions underscoring the role of pa- tients’ emotional adjustment in overall health. Future research should include high-quality randomized and clinical effectiveness studies with attention to healthcare use and costs