psychodynamic psychotherapy

Dr. Sriram Raghavendran
Dr. Sriram RaghavendranConsultant Psychiatrist um New Life Family Hospital
DYNAMIC PSYCHOTHERAPY
BY DR.SRIRAM.R
CHAIRPERSON – DR.RAJ KUMAR
FUNDAMENTAL PRINCIPLE COMMON TO
ALL PSYCHOTHERAPIES
 How many competent psychologists/psychiatrists does it
take to change a person?
ANSWER - Just one, provided the PERSON wants to change
WHAT IS IT?
 Psychodynamic psychotherapy is a form of depth
psychology (Tiefenpsychologie – Eugene Bleuler)
 Used to reveal the UNCONSCIOUS content of a client's
psyche in an effort to alleviate psychic tension.
 Form of psychoanalysis, but in addition,
 Relies on the interpersonal relationship between client
and therapist
HISTORY
 The principles of psychodynamics were first introduced in
the 1874 publication Lectures on Physiology by German
scientist Ernst Wilhelm von Brücke
 Brucke suggested all living organisms are energy systems
and operate on energy conservation
 Freud adopted this concept and applied this dynamic
characteristic to the human psyche (Brucke was Freuds
supervisor when he was a first year med student)
 Later further developed by the likes of Carl Jung, Alfred
Adler, Otto Rank and Melanie Klein
psychodynamic psychotherapy
DIFFERENCE BETWEEN PSYCHOANALYSIS AND
PSYCHODYNAMIC PSYCHOTHERAPY
PSYCHOANALYSIS
 Requires daily visits
 Analysand lies on a couch with the analyst
sitting out of sight and behind
 “Free-association” by analysand and a
silent analyst. Analyst breaks silence
whenever “interpretation” required
 Not a very interactive process
 “Imposed” on the analysand – payment is
required whether they attend the session
or not
 Takes several years to be effective
DYNAMIC PSYCHOTHERAPY
 Once a week (twice/thrice for unstable or
highly motivated clients)
 Client and therapist sit face to face
 The psychotherapist usually talks quite a lot,
compared to the “silence” of the
psychoanalyst.
 Highly interactive process
 No binding on the Client, flexible and Client
pays therapist on each visit
 Treatment generally 1-12/20 sessions (BPP) to
more than 50 sessions/several years (LTPP)
WHERE AND WHEN IS IT USED?
 Psychodynamic psychotherapy, in all its forms, is the
psychotherapy most frequently provided by
psychiatrists.
 Psychodynamic therapy is useful in long-term, short-
term, supportive, crisis intervention, and group/family
therapies, with patients of all ages.
 Patients hospitalized in psychiatric as well as medical-
surgical services can also benefit from a clinician’s
psychodynamic orientation.
CENTRAL CONCEPTS
 People feel and behave as they do for specific reasons.
 People are frequently unaware of why they feel or behave in
a certain fashion.
 Past events and experiences, often outside of awareness,
determine how people feel about themselves and their world.
 The need to master psychological pain and discomfort is
compelling and accounts for why many people behave
consistently and predictably in often self-defeating or
disappointing ways.
 The power of the therapeutic relationship is to provide a safe
forum for examining psychological problems, feelings and
behaviors by maintaining an open, nonjudgmental, and
empathic rapport with the patient.
CENTRAL CONCEPTS
 The past experiences of both the patient and the therapist have
a role in determining the power of the therapeutic relationship
and that life-issues will re-emerge in the therapy (Transference
and Counter-transference)
 A successful treatment must integrate both cognitive and
affective components of the patient’s self-awareness and
includes supportive as well as interpretive interventions.
 Use of free association as a major method for exploration of
internal conflicts and problems.
 Focusing on interpretations of transference, defense mechanisms,
and current symptoms and the ”working through” of these
present problems.
 Trust in insight as critically important for success in therapy.
UNDERSTANDABLE REASONS UNDERLIE FEELINGS,
WISHES, AND BEHAVIOR
 Patient’s current behavior due to his past experiences
 Therapist should always have the question “Why now?”
 Therapist should listen to the client in a distinct manner and
watch out for indirect clues
 Material, for example, may be expressed through jokes,
shifts in topic, revelations at the very end of a session,
metaphors, and symbols
 Watch out for resistance and ambivalence
UNDERSTANDABLE REASONS UNDERLIE FEELINGS,
WISHES, AND BEHAVIOR
 Ambivalence may be subtle or overt. It may take the form
of missed appointments or an unwillingness to explore
specific areas of the patient’s life
 Resistance is a common example of ambivalence and the
patient jumps from a more upsetting to a less upsetting
topic
 Serves as a protective function against threatening feelings
and fantasies
 Greater understanding of resistance is essential for
understanding the client
psychodynamic psychotherapy
FEELINGS AND BEHAVIOR ARE OFTEN A MYSTERY
TO THE PATIENT
 The notion that people experience and act on
unknown wishes and fears is an enlightening concept for
many patients
 Long term memory is important here. It is divided into
implicit and explicit memory as we know.
 Implicit memory is procedural, begins to form after birth,
does not require conscious attention or intact hippocampal
function
 Implicit memory is what is important in psychoanalysis
FEELINGS AND BEHAVIOR ARE OFTEN A MYSTERY
TO THE PATIENT
 Much of mental life is outside of awareness
 Experience of self and other is decided by “affective neural
templates” which in turn depends on reciprocal interaction
between mother and infant
 These affective templates help in organising neural
structure
 Implicit memory plays a role in psychological trauma – that
is why patients cannot recall fully the experiences of severe
abuse and neglect
THE PAST LIVES IN THE PRESENT
 Implicit memory + need to ward off/contain trauma or
emotional disruption = inaccessible experiences
 Early experiences shape personality and IP experiences eg. A
child who loses a parent and is forced to live with an
alcoholic/abusive/depressed parent
 These children grow up with anxiety and fear of
abandonement of IP relationships
 “Disorganised attachment” - abused and neglected infants
and toddlers are unable to develop a cohesive sense of self
and trust of others because they experienced their mothers
as “frightened” (unable to care) and “frightening” (unable to
empathise)
PERCEPTUAL DISTORTIONS ARE UBIQUITOUS
 An individual’s responding to someone in the present
(therapist) as if that person were an important figure from the
past is known as “transference”
 Neurobiologically, it changes the neural circuitry
 Clinicians, too, have feelings about and responses to patients
that may be confusing at times
 Although once considered unhelpful, these responses—
referred to as “countertransference”,actually facilitate
treatment enormously
 Countertransference -> “Why a feeling arises?” ->A view of the
patient’s psychic process and also in assessing “engagement”
of the therapist
PERCEPTUAL DISTORTIONS ARE UBIQUITOUS
 Transference is often manifested as an erotic attraction towards a
therapist, but can be seen in many other forms such as rage, hatred,
mistrust, parentification, extreme dependence, or even placing the
therapist in a god-like or guru status
 To quote Freud, "the transference, which, whether affectionate or
hostile, seemed in every case to constitute the greatest threat to the
treatment (Resistance), becomes its best tool“
 A therapist who is sexually attracted to a patient must understand the
countertransference aspect (if any) of the attraction, and look at how
the patient might be eliciting this attraction
 Once any countertransference aspect has been identified, the
therapist can ask the patient what his or her feelings are toward the
therapist, and can explore how those feelings relate to unconscious
motivations, desires, or fears.
SELF-DEFEATING BEHAVIOR
 How is it that some people never learn from their mistakes?
 For example, why has a man married three women in
succession, each one alcoholic and abusive? Or why
might a victim of childhood sexual abuse place herself in
dangerous situations that facilitate further trauma?
 People repeat unhelpful behavior in an attempt to master
enduring conflict or trauma, ever hopeful that they can
repair or resolve painful experiences by placing
themselves once again in a precarious situation to
“make it turn out differently”
SELF-DEFEATING BEHAVIOR
 Perhaps one of Freud’s more helpful clinical insights
was the recognition that behaviors are repeated
unless one becomes aware of patterns and reasons for
the predictability of the behavior
 To paraphrase Freud, those who cannot remember
certain affect-laden experiences are doomed to repeat
them
 One aspect of dynamic psychotherapy is to help the
patient appreciate the compelling repetition of unhelpful
situations or behaviors in which remembering can then
replace repeating or reliving
THE EMOTIONAL AND THE INTELLECTUAL ASPECTS
IN THERAPY
 Cognitive and affective components of negative
experiences to be examined
 Cathartic experiences alone are unlikely to provide
relief or promote behavioral change, and therapists should
not offer to explain the “dynamics” of clients
psychopathology
 Early attachment relationships are encoded as affect-
laden implicit memory
 The therapist should help the patient examine predictable
feelings and distortions within the safe therapeutic
relationship
THE EMOTIONAL AND THE INTELLECTUAL ASPECTS
IN THERAPY – How does PP help?
 It promotes changes in neural structure that afford the
patient an additional resource for feeling and
behaving differently
 Restructures intense implicit memories within the context
of a therapeutic relationship
 Many mistakenly consider only interpretive, clarifying,
or confronting interventions as being “psychodynamic”
 Additional “Supportive” interventions are suggestion,
reassurance, advice giving, praise, and environmental
manipulation
 Substantial gains can be made in supportive
therapy with patients who are experiencing
significant psychiatric illness
 A psychodynamically informed approach is also
exceptionally helpful in appreciating the
meaningfulness of medication to the patient
 Thus plays a vital role in medication compliance
TASKS OF THE PSYCHODYNAMIC PSYCHOTHERAPIST?
BOUNDARIES
 Ethically, the clinician should never takes advantage of
the patient to meet his or her own financial, sexual, or
other personal needs
 A clinician should not confide his or her problems and
needs, transforming the therapy into an unhelpful
experience for the patient
 Clinician should explain to the patient the time, place and
fee for therapy and should never be late for the
appointment
EFFECTIVE INTERPRETATION
 Empathize
 Identify a patient’s behavior and emotional patterns,
especially transferences, through understanding often
subtle or initially confusing communication
 Recognize the meaning of one’s own fantasies and
responses to the patient (countertransference)
 Maintain a verbal flow that deepens the treatment
 Appreciate the timing and dosage of interpretations
 Be patient
EFFICACY AND USES
 Many psychiatrists are unaware of the substantial research
supporting the helpfulness of psychodynamic
psychotherapy
 The psychodynamic treatment approach is not limited to
long-term psychotherapy alone
 Has broad applicability across the life span in crisis and
supportive interventions, combined treatment, brief
dynamic psychotherapy, group/family treatment,
inpatient psychiatry, and consultation-liaison psychiatry
 Treatment effect size is robust in some anxiety, personality
(especially Cluster C), mood, and substance abuse
disorders
EFFICACY AND USES
 Patients are much better off immediately after treatment,
and follow-up assessments show that they maintain their gains
 Studies of combined treatment using psychotherapy and
pharmacotherapy also support the benefits of treatment (Kay
J : Psychotherapy and Medication, Oxford Textbook of
Psychotherapy)
 Several RCT and meta-analysis have supported the use of
psychodynamic therapy for personality disorders, major
depression, anxiety disorders, and some eating disorders, as
well as posttraumatic stress disorder, panic disorder,
somatoform disorders, and substance use disorders
(Gabbard)
SHEDLER’S REVIEW
 In 2010, American Psychologist, the journal of the American
Psychological Association, published a review article by
Jonathan Shedler, PhD, associate professor of psychiatry at
the University of Colorado Denver, School of Medicine, which
explored the efficacy of psychodynamic psychotherapy
 Shedler reviewed 8 meta-analyses (comprising 160 studies) of
psychodynamic therapy, plus 10 meta-analyses of other
psychological treatments and antidepressant medications
 He focused on effect size: 0.8 is considered a large effect; 0.5,
a moderate effect; and 0.2, a small effect. The overall mean
effect size for antidepressant medications approved by the
FDA between 1987 and 2004 was 0.31. The effect sizes for
psychodynamic therapy and other psychotherapies were
much higher.
COCHRANE LIBRARY
 One methodologically rigorous meta-analysis of
psychodynamic therapy, published by the Cochrane
Library, included 23 randomized controlled trials of 1431
patients with a range of common mental disorders
 The studies compared patients who received short-term
(less than 40 hours) psychodynamic therapy with controls
(wait list, minimal treatment, or treatment as usual)
 The overall effect size was 0.97 for general symptom
improvement
 The effect size increased by 50%, to 1.51, when patients
were reevaluated 9 or more months after therapy ended
COMBINATION THERAPY – MEDS + PP
Glen O.Gabbard, Textbook of Psychotherapeutic Treatments, Pg-138, 2009, First edition
THANK YOU
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psychodynamic psychotherapy

  • 2. FUNDAMENTAL PRINCIPLE COMMON TO ALL PSYCHOTHERAPIES  How many competent psychologists/psychiatrists does it take to change a person? ANSWER - Just one, provided the PERSON wants to change
  • 3. WHAT IS IT?  Psychodynamic psychotherapy is a form of depth psychology (Tiefenpsychologie – Eugene Bleuler)  Used to reveal the UNCONSCIOUS content of a client's psyche in an effort to alleviate psychic tension.  Form of psychoanalysis, but in addition,  Relies on the interpersonal relationship between client and therapist
  • 4. HISTORY  The principles of psychodynamics were first introduced in the 1874 publication Lectures on Physiology by German scientist Ernst Wilhelm von Brücke  Brucke suggested all living organisms are energy systems and operate on energy conservation  Freud adopted this concept and applied this dynamic characteristic to the human psyche (Brucke was Freuds supervisor when he was a first year med student)  Later further developed by the likes of Carl Jung, Alfred Adler, Otto Rank and Melanie Klein
  • 6. DIFFERENCE BETWEEN PSYCHOANALYSIS AND PSYCHODYNAMIC PSYCHOTHERAPY PSYCHOANALYSIS  Requires daily visits  Analysand lies on a couch with the analyst sitting out of sight and behind  “Free-association” by analysand and a silent analyst. Analyst breaks silence whenever “interpretation” required  Not a very interactive process  “Imposed” on the analysand – payment is required whether they attend the session or not  Takes several years to be effective DYNAMIC PSYCHOTHERAPY  Once a week (twice/thrice for unstable or highly motivated clients)  Client and therapist sit face to face  The psychotherapist usually talks quite a lot, compared to the “silence” of the psychoanalyst.  Highly interactive process  No binding on the Client, flexible and Client pays therapist on each visit  Treatment generally 1-12/20 sessions (BPP) to more than 50 sessions/several years (LTPP)
  • 7. WHERE AND WHEN IS IT USED?  Psychodynamic psychotherapy, in all its forms, is the psychotherapy most frequently provided by psychiatrists.  Psychodynamic therapy is useful in long-term, short- term, supportive, crisis intervention, and group/family therapies, with patients of all ages.  Patients hospitalized in psychiatric as well as medical- surgical services can also benefit from a clinician’s psychodynamic orientation.
  • 8. CENTRAL CONCEPTS  People feel and behave as they do for specific reasons.  People are frequently unaware of why they feel or behave in a certain fashion.  Past events and experiences, often outside of awareness, determine how people feel about themselves and their world.  The need to master psychological pain and discomfort is compelling and accounts for why many people behave consistently and predictably in often self-defeating or disappointing ways.  The power of the therapeutic relationship is to provide a safe forum for examining psychological problems, feelings and behaviors by maintaining an open, nonjudgmental, and empathic rapport with the patient.
  • 9. CENTRAL CONCEPTS  The past experiences of both the patient and the therapist have a role in determining the power of the therapeutic relationship and that life-issues will re-emerge in the therapy (Transference and Counter-transference)  A successful treatment must integrate both cognitive and affective components of the patient’s self-awareness and includes supportive as well as interpretive interventions.  Use of free association as a major method for exploration of internal conflicts and problems.  Focusing on interpretations of transference, defense mechanisms, and current symptoms and the ”working through” of these present problems.  Trust in insight as critically important for success in therapy.
  • 10. UNDERSTANDABLE REASONS UNDERLIE FEELINGS, WISHES, AND BEHAVIOR  Patient’s current behavior due to his past experiences  Therapist should always have the question “Why now?”  Therapist should listen to the client in a distinct manner and watch out for indirect clues  Material, for example, may be expressed through jokes, shifts in topic, revelations at the very end of a session, metaphors, and symbols  Watch out for resistance and ambivalence
  • 11. UNDERSTANDABLE REASONS UNDERLIE FEELINGS, WISHES, AND BEHAVIOR  Ambivalence may be subtle or overt. It may take the form of missed appointments or an unwillingness to explore specific areas of the patient’s life  Resistance is a common example of ambivalence and the patient jumps from a more upsetting to a less upsetting topic  Serves as a protective function against threatening feelings and fantasies  Greater understanding of resistance is essential for understanding the client
  • 13. FEELINGS AND BEHAVIOR ARE OFTEN A MYSTERY TO THE PATIENT  The notion that people experience and act on unknown wishes and fears is an enlightening concept for many patients  Long term memory is important here. It is divided into implicit and explicit memory as we know.  Implicit memory is procedural, begins to form after birth, does not require conscious attention or intact hippocampal function  Implicit memory is what is important in psychoanalysis
  • 14. FEELINGS AND BEHAVIOR ARE OFTEN A MYSTERY TO THE PATIENT  Much of mental life is outside of awareness  Experience of self and other is decided by “affective neural templates” which in turn depends on reciprocal interaction between mother and infant  These affective templates help in organising neural structure  Implicit memory plays a role in psychological trauma – that is why patients cannot recall fully the experiences of severe abuse and neglect
  • 15. THE PAST LIVES IN THE PRESENT  Implicit memory + need to ward off/contain trauma or emotional disruption = inaccessible experiences  Early experiences shape personality and IP experiences eg. A child who loses a parent and is forced to live with an alcoholic/abusive/depressed parent  These children grow up with anxiety and fear of abandonement of IP relationships  “Disorganised attachment” - abused and neglected infants and toddlers are unable to develop a cohesive sense of self and trust of others because they experienced their mothers as “frightened” (unable to care) and “frightening” (unable to empathise)
  • 16. PERCEPTUAL DISTORTIONS ARE UBIQUITOUS  An individual’s responding to someone in the present (therapist) as if that person were an important figure from the past is known as “transference”  Neurobiologically, it changes the neural circuitry  Clinicians, too, have feelings about and responses to patients that may be confusing at times  Although once considered unhelpful, these responses— referred to as “countertransference”,actually facilitate treatment enormously  Countertransference -> “Why a feeling arises?” ->A view of the patient’s psychic process and also in assessing “engagement” of the therapist
  • 17. PERCEPTUAL DISTORTIONS ARE UBIQUITOUS  Transference is often manifested as an erotic attraction towards a therapist, but can be seen in many other forms such as rage, hatred, mistrust, parentification, extreme dependence, or even placing the therapist in a god-like or guru status  To quote Freud, "the transference, which, whether affectionate or hostile, seemed in every case to constitute the greatest threat to the treatment (Resistance), becomes its best tool“  A therapist who is sexually attracted to a patient must understand the countertransference aspect (if any) of the attraction, and look at how the patient might be eliciting this attraction  Once any countertransference aspect has been identified, the therapist can ask the patient what his or her feelings are toward the therapist, and can explore how those feelings relate to unconscious motivations, desires, or fears.
  • 18. SELF-DEFEATING BEHAVIOR  How is it that some people never learn from their mistakes?  For example, why has a man married three women in succession, each one alcoholic and abusive? Or why might a victim of childhood sexual abuse place herself in dangerous situations that facilitate further trauma?  People repeat unhelpful behavior in an attempt to master enduring conflict or trauma, ever hopeful that they can repair or resolve painful experiences by placing themselves once again in a precarious situation to “make it turn out differently”
  • 19. SELF-DEFEATING BEHAVIOR  Perhaps one of Freud’s more helpful clinical insights was the recognition that behaviors are repeated unless one becomes aware of patterns and reasons for the predictability of the behavior  To paraphrase Freud, those who cannot remember certain affect-laden experiences are doomed to repeat them  One aspect of dynamic psychotherapy is to help the patient appreciate the compelling repetition of unhelpful situations or behaviors in which remembering can then replace repeating or reliving
  • 20. THE EMOTIONAL AND THE INTELLECTUAL ASPECTS IN THERAPY  Cognitive and affective components of negative experiences to be examined  Cathartic experiences alone are unlikely to provide relief or promote behavioral change, and therapists should not offer to explain the “dynamics” of clients psychopathology  Early attachment relationships are encoded as affect- laden implicit memory  The therapist should help the patient examine predictable feelings and distortions within the safe therapeutic relationship
  • 21. THE EMOTIONAL AND THE INTELLECTUAL ASPECTS IN THERAPY – How does PP help?  It promotes changes in neural structure that afford the patient an additional resource for feeling and behaving differently  Restructures intense implicit memories within the context of a therapeutic relationship  Many mistakenly consider only interpretive, clarifying, or confronting interventions as being “psychodynamic”  Additional “Supportive” interventions are suggestion, reassurance, advice giving, praise, and environmental manipulation
  • 22.  Substantial gains can be made in supportive therapy with patients who are experiencing significant psychiatric illness  A psychodynamically informed approach is also exceptionally helpful in appreciating the meaningfulness of medication to the patient  Thus plays a vital role in medication compliance
  • 23. TASKS OF THE PSYCHODYNAMIC PSYCHOTHERAPIST?
  • 24. BOUNDARIES  Ethically, the clinician should never takes advantage of the patient to meet his or her own financial, sexual, or other personal needs  A clinician should not confide his or her problems and needs, transforming the therapy into an unhelpful experience for the patient  Clinician should explain to the patient the time, place and fee for therapy and should never be late for the appointment
  • 25. EFFECTIVE INTERPRETATION  Empathize  Identify a patient’s behavior and emotional patterns, especially transferences, through understanding often subtle or initially confusing communication  Recognize the meaning of one’s own fantasies and responses to the patient (countertransference)  Maintain a verbal flow that deepens the treatment  Appreciate the timing and dosage of interpretations  Be patient
  • 26. EFFICACY AND USES  Many psychiatrists are unaware of the substantial research supporting the helpfulness of psychodynamic psychotherapy  The psychodynamic treatment approach is not limited to long-term psychotherapy alone  Has broad applicability across the life span in crisis and supportive interventions, combined treatment, brief dynamic psychotherapy, group/family treatment, inpatient psychiatry, and consultation-liaison psychiatry  Treatment effect size is robust in some anxiety, personality (especially Cluster C), mood, and substance abuse disorders
  • 27. EFFICACY AND USES  Patients are much better off immediately after treatment, and follow-up assessments show that they maintain their gains  Studies of combined treatment using psychotherapy and pharmacotherapy also support the benefits of treatment (Kay J : Psychotherapy and Medication, Oxford Textbook of Psychotherapy)  Several RCT and meta-analysis have supported the use of psychodynamic therapy for personality disorders, major depression, anxiety disorders, and some eating disorders, as well as posttraumatic stress disorder, panic disorder, somatoform disorders, and substance use disorders (Gabbard)
  • 28. SHEDLER’S REVIEW  In 2010, American Psychologist, the journal of the American Psychological Association, published a review article by Jonathan Shedler, PhD, associate professor of psychiatry at the University of Colorado Denver, School of Medicine, which explored the efficacy of psychodynamic psychotherapy  Shedler reviewed 8 meta-analyses (comprising 160 studies) of psychodynamic therapy, plus 10 meta-analyses of other psychological treatments and antidepressant medications  He focused on effect size: 0.8 is considered a large effect; 0.5, a moderate effect; and 0.2, a small effect. The overall mean effect size for antidepressant medications approved by the FDA between 1987 and 2004 was 0.31. The effect sizes for psychodynamic therapy and other psychotherapies were much higher.
  • 29. COCHRANE LIBRARY  One methodologically rigorous meta-analysis of psychodynamic therapy, published by the Cochrane Library, included 23 randomized controlled trials of 1431 patients with a range of common mental disorders  The studies compared patients who received short-term (less than 40 hours) psychodynamic therapy with controls (wait list, minimal treatment, or treatment as usual)  The overall effect size was 0.97 for general symptom improvement  The effect size increased by 50%, to 1.51, when patients were reevaluated 9 or more months after therapy ended
  • 30. COMBINATION THERAPY – MEDS + PP Glen O.Gabbard, Textbook of Psychotherapeutic Treatments, Pg-138, 2009, First edition