Title: City University of New York, Dean's Office ... and slappin
1Attachment and Psychotherapy Implications from
Empirical Research
- Kenneth N. Levy, Ph.D.
- Pennsylvania State University
- and
- Joan and Sanford I. Weill Medical College of
Cornell University - Early Development, Attachment, and Psychotherapy,
Copenhagen, Denmark, - November 20th-22nd , 2008
2Personality Disorders Institute (PDI)Joan and
Sanford I. Weill Medical College of Cornell
University
- Otto F. Kernberg, MD, Director
- John F. Clarkin, PhD, Co-Director
- Frank Yeomans, MD
- Armand Loranger, PhD
- Paulina Kernberg, MD
- Mark Lenzenweger, PhD (Binghamton)
- Eve Caligor, MD
- Ann Appelbaum, PhD
- Monica Carsky, PhD
- Catherine Haren, Psy.D.
- Diana Diamond, PhD (CUNY)
- Pamela A. Foelsch, PhD
- James Hull, PhD
- Michael Stone, MD
- Jill Delaney, M.S.W.
3Laboratory for Research in Personality,
Psychopathology, and Psychotherapy
- City University of New York
- Kevin B. Meehan
- Joseph S. Reynoso
- Michal Weber
- Komal Choksi
- Penn State
- Lori N. Scott
- Rachel H. Wasserman
- Joseph E. Beeney
- William D. Ellison
4Funding and Support
- National Institute of Mental Health
- Borderline Personality Disorder Research
Foundation - National Association for Research in
Schizophrenia and Depression - American Psychoanalytic Association
- International Psychoanalytic Association
- Köhler Foundation
- DeWitt Wallace Readers Digest Fund (Kernberg)
- Department of Psychiatry, Weill Medical College
- City University of New York, Deans Office
- Research Foundation of the City University of New
York - Pennsylvania State University
- Social Science Research Institute
5Attachment and Psychotherapy
- Although Bowlby was a psychiatrist.
Psychoanalyst, and psychotherapist, much of the
research on attachment theory has been carried
out by developmental and social psychologists
focusing on normative aspects of attachment. - From its inception, however, Bowlby
conceptualized attachment theory as relevant to
both normal and psychopathological development.
6Attachment and Psychotherapy
- Bowlby believed that attachment insecurity,
although originally an adaptive set of strategies
designed to manage distress, increases
vulnerability to psychopathology, and can be
linked to specific types of difficulties that
arise. - Â "the many forms of emotional distress and
personality disturbance, including anxiety,
anger, depression, and emotional detachment (p.
5) which result from the disruption of those bonds
7Attachment and Psychotherapy
- Â Bowlby also believed that attachment theory had
particular relevance for psychotherapy.
8Bowlby on Attachment and Psychotherapy
- The chief role of the therapist is to provide
the patient with a temporary attachment figure
(Bowlby, 1975, p. 191) - the therapists first task is to provide the
patient with a secure base from which to explore
both himself and also his relations with all
those with whom he has made or might make, an
affectional bond (Bowlby, 1977 p. 421)
9Bowlby Five Key Tasks of Psychotherapy
- Establishing a secure base
- which involves providing patients with a secure
base from which they can explore the painful
aspects of their life by being supportive and
caring - Exploring past attachments
- which involves helping patients explore past and
present relationships, including their
expectations, feelings, and behaviors
10Bowlby Five Key Tasks of Psychotherapy
- Exploring the therapeutic relationship,
- which involves helping the patient examine the
relationship with the therapist and how it may
relate to relationships or experiences outside of
therapy - Linking past experiences to present ones,
- which involves encouraging awareness of how
current relationship experiences may be related
to past ones
11Bowlby Five Key Tasks of Psychotherapy
- Revising internal working models
- which involves helping patients to feel, think,
and act in new ways that are unlike past
relationships.
12Bowlby Five Key Tasks of Psychotherapy
- Revising internal working models
- which involves helping patients to feel, think,
and act in new ways that are unlike past
relationships. - Providing a Safe Haven
- Which to go in times of distress
- Can be a representational
13Bowlby Five Key Tasks of Psychotherapy
- Revising internal working models
- which involves helping patients to feel, think,
and act in new ways that are unlike past
relationships. - Providing a Safe Haven
- Which to go in times of distress
- Can be a representational
- Transference and countertransference dynamics
(multiple contradictory IWM)
14Attachment and Psychotherapy
- There are a number of ways that Attachment and
Psychotherapy intersect - Attachment theory based interventions
- Attachment organization as a moderator of outcome
(prognostic indicator) - Attachment organization as a prescriptive
indicator - Psychotherapy process (therapist and patient in
session behaviors) as a function of attachment
processes - Attachment organization as a moderator of
psychotherapy process - Change in attachment representations as outcome
15Attachment Theory Based Interventions
- Many treatments implicitly use principles and
techniques that are consistent with attachment
theory - the establishment of a therapeutic alliance
- the exploration of past and/or relational
experiences, the updating of self-views - Until recently, few psychotherapies have been
developed based directly on attachment theory
principles
16Attachment Based Child Interventions
- Baby Carrier Intervention (Ainisfeld et al.,
1990) - Home Visits (van den Boom, 1994)
- Intervention for high-risk pregnant women,
(Korfmacher, Adam, Ogawa, Egeland,1997) - Watch, Wait, and Wonder (Cohen, Muir et al.,
1999) - Toddler-Parent Psychotherapy (Cicchetti, Toth,
Rogosch, 1999 Toth et al., 2006) - Circle of Security (Marvin, Cooper, Hoffman,
Powell, 2002 Hoffman et al., 2006)
17Attachment Based Child Interventions
- Video Feedback Positive Parenting (Zeijl eta l.,
2006) - Prenatal Home Visits (Heinicke et al., 2006)
- Parent-Child Psychotherapy (Lieberman Van Horn,
2004 Lieberman, Ippen, Van Horn, 2006)
18Ainisfeld et al., 1990 Attachment Security in
SS (n 46)
19Attachment Based Adult Interventions
- Interpersonal Psychotherapy (IPT Klerman,
Weissman, Rounsaville, Chevron, 1984) - Mentalization Based Therapy (Bateman Fonagy,
1999 2001 2008) - Attachment Injury Resolution Model for Couples
based Emotion Focused Psychotherapy (Johnson,
2004 Makinen Johnson, 2006)
20Bateman Fonagy (1999)
- RCT of the effectiveness of 18 months of a
non-manualized psychoanalytically oriented day
hospitalization program compared with routine
general psychiatric care for patients with BPD - significant improvement in depressive symptoms
- better social and interpersonal functioning
- significant decrease in suicidal and
self-injurious acts - number of inpatient days
- Note
- TAU consisted of 2 hours of psychiatric care a
month vs. 30 hours a week of PHP
21Bateman Fonagy (2008) Partial Hospital RCT
Patients at 5 yrs FU
22Partial Hospital RCT Patients at 5 yrs FU
23Partial Hospital RCT Attempting Suicide
N44 NNT (18 months)2.1 NNT (36 months)1.9 NNT
(60 months)2.1
p lt .05 p lt .01 p lt .001
Follow -up
Treatment
24Partial Hospital RCT Employment
25Partial Hospital RCT GAF Scores
26Assessment of Attachment
- Adult Attachment Interview
- Reflective Function
27Adult Attachment Interview
- On the AAI individuals are asked to describe
- Their parents generally, giving 5 adjectives with
specific examples to back up general descriptions - How parents responded when they were upset, ill,
or in distress - The impact of early experience on current adult
functioning - The interview has the effect of surprising the
unconscious - Provides numerous opportunities for the speaker
to elaborate upon, contradict or fail to support
examples - Can classify interviewees pattern of attachment
as Secure, Preoccupied, Dismissive, Unresolved,
or Cannot Classify
28Assessment of Coherence (George, Kaplan, Main,
1985)
- Coherence
- Qualitytruthful, i.e., evidence for what was
presented - Quantitysuccinct, and yet complete
- Relationrelevant to the topic at hand
- Mannerclear and orderly
- Rated on 9 point scale, with 1 low coherence and
9 high coherence, and score of 5 cut-off for
secure attachment - Not related to IQ, or coherence of narrative
discourse of non-attachment experiences (e.g.,
work)
29Reflective Function
- The social cognitive and affective process of
interpreting or making sense of behavior in
oneself and others in terms of intentional mental
states, such as desires, feelings, and beliefs. - The capacity to reflect upon ones own
experience, whatever his or her attachment status.
30Aspects of Reflective Function
- The explicit effort to tease out mental states
underlying behavior - Accurate attributions of mental states to others.
- As suggested by differentiated views of events
- My mother was good if I were physically hurt,
except if she was frightened, then she wouldnt
be able to cope. - Recognition of diverse perspectives and points of
view of the same event. - My mother had the habit of lifting her hand and
slapping us, if we were naughty, or when she
thought that we were naughty.
31Aspects of Reflective Function
- Recognizing the developmental aspects of mental
states - Taking a developmental perspective
- When we were little my father always seemed to
have time for us and we would have so much fun
together, but then as we got older he withdrew
and had difficulty I think getting on with
teenagers. - Â Mental states in relation to the interviewer
- Acknowledging the separateness of minds
- It must seem strange to you that Im still
upset, but it is almost exactly this time of year
when the accident happened.
32Aspects of Reflective Function
- Awareness of the nature of mental states
- The opaqueness of mental states
- I thought my mother felt resentful of us, but
Im not really sure if she felt that way herself
would be regarded as reflective whereas the
statement, One can never know what someone else
thinks would not. - Awareness of the defensive nature of certain
mental states - You tend to blank things out that make you
unhappy sometimes.
33Reflective Function(Fonagy, Target, Steele,
Steele, 1998)
- The process of being able to reflect on
experience and interpreting behavior in terms of
intentional mental states, such as desires,
feelings, and beliefs represented by four
dimensions - Awareness of the nature of mental states (Well I
think he felt obligated to do that because he
felt guilty) - Explicit efforts to tease out mental states
underlying behavior (or at least thats how it
appeared, sometimes you feel different inside
from how things appear.) - Recognizing developmental aspects of mental
states (Its only as an adult that I understand
this, as a child I was confused why he did
that.) - Recognition of mental states in relation to the
interviewer (Im not sure if that makes sense,
should I explain further?)
34Reflective Function Scale (Fonagy, Target,
Steele, Steele, 1998)
- -1 Negative
- Rejection, totally barren, grossly distorted,
overly concrete, unintegrated, or inappropriate
RF - 1 Disavowal, distorted/self-serving
- 3 Naive simplistic or over-analytic/hyperactive
- 5 Ordinary or inconsistent
- model of mind is fairly coherent, but somewhat
one dimensional or simplistic - 7 Marked
- 9 Exceptional
- unusually complex, elaborate or original
reasoning about mental states
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37Correlation between Coherence and RF
- In non-clinical samples .73 (Fonagy et al.,
1991) - In BPD sample pre-treatment .48
- In BPD sample post-treatment .52
- Note significant at the .001 level.
38Validity for RF
- Fonagy et al (1995) found that RF mediated the
relationship between parental attachment security
and infant attachment security in the SS. - insecurely attached parents with high RF were
more likely to have securely attached babies than
insecurely attached parents with low RF.
39Validity for RF
- Grienenberger, Kelly, Slade, 2005 found that
mothers RF mediated the relationship between
atypical maternal behaviors (e.g., affective
communication errors, role/boundary confusion,
intrusiveness) and attachment security in their
infants.
40Validity for RF
- Fonagy et al. (1996) found that among patients
reporting abuse, those who scored low on RF were
more likely to be diagnosed with BPD compared to
those who were abused but scored high on RF. - Thus, high RF seems to be a possible buffer
against the development of BPD in individuals who
have experienced abuse.
41Wisconsin Card Sorting Task
- Measure of executive functioning,
- Specifically concept formation and the capacity
shift attention (cognitive flexibility)
42Relation of Reflective Function to Wisconsin Card
Sort Test
r -.47
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53Relation of Reflective Function to Impulsivity on
Continuous Performance Test
r .35
54Attachment Moderates Likelihood of Being in
Psychotherapy
- Riggs et al. (2002) examined attachment and
history of psychotherapy in 120 middle-class
women. - dismissing women ? report a history of
psychotherapy - disorganized ? report a history of individual
psychotherapy - secure women ? report a history of couples
therapy.
55Attachment as a Moderator of Outcome
- Dozier, 1990
- Fs more cooperative with treatment
- Ds associated with less help seeking, less
self-disclosure, and poorer treatment use - Dozier, Cue, Barnett, 1994 Tyrrell et al.,
1999 - Fs clinicians more likely to challenge patients
own strategies for relating - insecure clinicians tended to mirror the patients
interpersonal style - Better outcome when patient and therapist
attachment complementary vs. concordant.
56Attachment as a Moderator of Outcome
- Fonagy et al., 1996
- Ds attachment predicted better outcomes than E
57? in GAF between Admission and Discharge as a
Function of Attachment
58Attachment as a Prescriptive Indicator
- McBride, Bagby, Atkinson, 2006
- attachment security moderate treatment outcomes
in a RCT of CBT and IPT for MDD - avoidant attachment predicted better response to
CBT than to IPT on all outcome measures, but
anxious attachment did not predict different
outcomes with the two treatments.
59Attachment as an Outcome
- Fonagy et al., 1995
- Diamond et al., 2003 Levy et al., 2008
- Stovall-McClough Cloitre, 2003
- Levy et al., 2006,
- Makinen and Johnson , 2006
- Cicchetti et al., 1999 Toth et al., 2006
- Hoffman et al., 2006
60Fonagy et al., 1995 Change in Security of
Attachment (n 35)
61Diamond et al., 2003 Change in Security of
Attachment (n 10)
62Change in Coherence and RF as a Function of
Time Pre-Post Study
Coherence Paired t-test -2.86, p lt .02 RF
paired t-test -6.38, p lt .001 Levy et al., 2008
63Stovall-McClough Cloitre, 2003 Change in
Unresolved Status (n 18)
64BPDRF-PDI RCTOverall Study Aims
- To assess the efficacy of Transference Focused
Psychotherapy (TFP) and Supportive Psychotherapy
(SPT) compared with Dialectical Behavioral
Therapy (DBT) for patients with Borderline
Personality Disorder (Clarkin, Levy, Lenzenweger,
Kernberg, 2004, Journal of Personality
Disorders)
65BPDRF-PDI RCTOverall Study Aims and Design
- Examine efficacy of Transference Focused
Psychotherapy - Randomized 90 patients to one of three
treatments TFP, DBT, and Supportive
Psychotherapy (SPT) - Experienced treatment cell leaders, experienced
trained therapists, supervised weekly - Patients clinically referred, highly comorbid
(77 hx of MDD, 55 anxiety disorder, 33 eating
disorder, and 38 substance use disorder), and
highly traumatized (28 severe sexual abuse and
50 some sexual abuse) - (Clarkin, Levy et al., 2004 2007 Levy et al.,
2006)
66Treatments
- Transference Focused Psychotherapy
- Uses a treatment contract to set the frame and
assist in the containment of acting out
behaviors, stipulates a sequence of treatment
phases for interventions, emphasizes analysis of
the transference for the integration of disparate
representational models. - Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT)
- emphasizes a balance between acceptance and
change, skills training in the context of
validation - Supportive Psychodynamic Psychotherapy (SPT)
- eschews transference interpretation and places
primary emphasis on strengthening adaptive
defenses forming an alliance, providing
reassurance and advice
67Transference Focused Psychotherapy
- Modified Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy
- Specifically for personality disorders
- Structured twice weekly outpatient treatment
- Based on Otto Kernbergs Object Relations Model
- Primary goal
- reduce symptomatology and self-destructive
behavior through integration of representations
of both self and other (resolution of identity
diffusion or stated differently the
accomplishment of identity consolidation)
68Overview of the TFP Treatment Model
- During the first year of treatment, TFP focuses
on a hierarchy of issues - Begins with a treatment contract
- the containment of suicidal and self-destructive
behaviors - the various ways of interfering with the
treatment - In session, therapist follows dominant affect
- Identifies and explicates recapitulation of
dominant object relational patterns, as they are
experienced and expressed in the here-and-now of
the relationship with the therapist
(conceptualized as a transference relationship).
- Not about reconstructing childhood experience
69Therapeutic Techniques
- Clarification
- Of the patients subjective experience
- Confrontation
- Tactfully pointing out discrepancies between what
the patient is saying at one time and another or
between what they are saying and doing or saying
and expressing - Transference Interpretation
- The therapists timely, clear, and tactful
interpretations of the dominant, affect-laden
themes and patient enactments in the here and now
of the transference, are hypothesized to
integrate polarized self- and object
representations.
70Proposed Mechanisms of Therapeutic Change
- Integration of self concept
- Integration of concept of significant others
- Integration of previously dissociated or split
off affect states with the result that affective
experiences become enriched and modulated
71Increased Differentiation and Integration
- Ability to think more flexibly and benevolently
- Impaired representations become transformed
through new experiences
- Relationships
- infused with less aggression
- greater capacity for intimacy,
- increased coherence of identity,
- reduction in self-destructive behaviors,
- general improvement in functioning
72Therapist Patient
- Sets frame via contract
Experiences safe haven to express self - ?
- Expression of affect includes actions
and - interactions based on implicit OR
dyads -
- Observes the action without judging or reacting
- Tries to understand/explicate the OR underlying
the actions, using - 1 Clarification
- 2 - Confrontation
- 3 Interpretation Increases reflection
- (these appeal for reflection
- address obstacles to it)
- Further reflection, with Progress
toward - increased contextualization
integration - Increased modulation of affects
73Levy, Critchfield, Clarkin, in preparation
74Treatment Cell Leaders
- Treatment cell leaders were very experienced in
the modality that they were supervising - Many years of experience practicing in their
respective treatments - Many years supervising in their respective
treatments - Acknowledged as nationally known experts
- Published on their treatments
75Therapists
- In each condition
- Chosen by treatment cell leader
- Experienced practitioner in respective modality
- Supervised weekly and monitored for adherence and
competence - Generally senior therapists, although ranged from
recent graduates to those with 30 years of
experience
76Patient Demographic Characteristics
- 90 Patients (83 Women and 7 Men)
- Mean Age 30.9 (S.D. 7.85)
- Marital status
- 7 (7.7) Married, 11 (12.2) Living with partner,
40 (44.4) Divorced, 21 (23.3) In relationship - Education
- 4-year college degree (any college) 32.2
(63.3) - Employment
- Employed (fulltime) 64.4 (33.3)
- Ethnicity/Race
- 67.8 Caucasian, 10.0 African-American, 8.9
Hispanic, 5.6 Asian, 3.3 mixed ethnicity/race,
4.4 other
77Patients Represented a Seriously Disturbed Cohort
- All clinically referred
- Highly comorbid (77 hx of MDD, 55 anxiety
disorder, 33 eating disorder, and 38 substance
use disorder) - Highly traumatized (28 severe sexual abuse and
50 some sexual abuse) - A third of the patients began cutting by age 12
- Not selected based on intelligence or
analyzability!
78TFP Outcome
- Primary Outcome Variables
- Significant improvement in TFP and DBT but not
in Supportive - Suicidality
- Significant improvement in TFP and SPT
- Anger and Impulsivity
- Significant improvement only in TFP group
- Assault
- Secondary Outcome Variables
- Significant improvement in all three groups
- Depression, Anxiety, Social Relations, GAF
- Significant improvement only in TFP group
- Irritability
79Distribution of 5-Category Attachment Status Time
1
80Change in Secure-Insecure Attachment Status as a
Function of Time
McNemars ?2 test was significant at the p .03
level.
81Change in Coherence as a Function of Time and
Treatment
82Change in Reflective Function as a Function of
Time and Treatment
83Change in Resolved-Unresolved Attachment Status
as a Function of Time
84Dropout as a Function of Treatment Condition and
Reflective Function
- Survival Analysis
- Treatment Condition and RF as covariates
- Is there differential dropout across treatments
as a function of RF? - e.g., are patients with low RF retained better in
certain treatments? - RF at three levels
- Severely Impaired, Impaired, Average
85Survival analysis on the Dropout criterion with
Tx Condition and RF
- RF moderates relationship between Treatment
Condition and Dropout - Average When RF was within the average range,
there were no significant differences across
treatments with respect to dropout - TFP SPT DBT
- Impaired Significantly more dropout for
individuals in DBT than TFP (Wilcoxon
Statistic.4.61, df1, plt.03) and SPT (Wilcoxon
Statistic8.81, df1, lt.003). - TFPltDBTSPT
- Severely Impaired RF Significantly more dropout
in DBT than TFP (Wilcoxon Statistic3.82, df1,
plt.05), while the differences between SPT and
other treatments were non-significant. - TFPltDBT, SPT ns
86Dropout in Average RF Group
87Dropout in Impaired RF group
88Dropout in Severely Impaired Group
89Specific Aspects of TFP that may Increase
Mentalizing
- Focus on the object relation dyads
- Explore mental state of other and self
- The nature of mental states
- Reduces rigidity about knowledge of other peoples
minds - Model and encourage patient to think about mental
states - Move beyond empathizing by also offering a
different, yet experientially appropriate
representation (contingent and marked)
90Specific Aspects of TFP that may Increase
Mentalizing
- Clarification
- Initiates self-exploration
- Identifies differences in perspective
- Confrontation
- Bids for self-reflection
- Brings into awareness disparate information and
illustrates the defensive nature of certain
mental states
91Specific Aspects of TFP that may Increase
Mentalizing
- The Transference Interpretation
- timely, clear, and tactful interpretations of the
dominant, affect-laden themes and patient
enactments in the here and now of the
transference - Mentalization emotion-laden content
- Awareness of the defensive nature of certain
mental states - Assists patient in elaborating on emotional state
that may have led to the enactment - are hypothesized to integrate polarized
representations of self and others
92Clinical Observations
- Cannot Classify
- E/Ds
- Derogations in angry preoccupied passages
- Pseudo Secures (F/E/Ds or Ud/F)
- Mildly coherent in the provision of believable
episodic memories, but may show below threshold
idealization, derogation, lack of recall,
passivity, or angry preoccupation - however, episodic memories are often belied by a
self-serving quality with positive wrap-ups, lack
of true valuing of relationships, and show little
evidence compassion, affection, forgiveness, or
freshness characteristic of secure narratives
93Clinical Observations
- Cannot Classify
- Time 1 CCs that move to E or D at Time 2
- Time 1 Es or Ds that move to CC at Time 2
- E classifiable transcripts with split
representations - E1/E2
- passive, self-blaming passages (helpless/passive/a
voidant) - Angry preoccupied parent-blaming passages
(hostile/controlling)
94Clinical Observations
- Lyons-Ruths Hostile/Helpless distinction
- Severe Splitting
- Rapid oscillations of object relation dyads
- Splitting between caregiver
- Mention of trauma at beginning of interview or
during five adjectives but no mention of it later
in interview when topic is brought up by
interviewer - Idealization or denigration of interviewer
95Clinical Observations
- Psychic Equivalence
- Interview process or questions experienced as the
equivalent of past traumatic experiences
96Therapist RF and Patient RF
- We assessed RF in our therapist in the small
pre-post study using a modified patient-therapist
AAI. - Therapist RF re patient generally high
- However, it did vary within therapist as a
function of patient (but not patient RF!) - Therapist tended to have lower RF with their Ds
patients
97Clinical Illustration
- Single, 32 year old, unemployed female
- Many unsuccessful treatments
- Over a number of years, increasingly isolated in
her apartment, gaining weight, rarely bathing - Poor interpersonal relations rationalized because
of her ethnic background - No sexual relations ever, except 1 attempt by
boyfriend leading to formal rape charges
98Clinical Illustration
- Occasional self-cutting
- 3 brief hospitalizations diagnosis Bipolar
Disorder - Background Middle daughter in highly educated
family prestigious and dominant but tough
father masters degree educated series of jobs
destroyed by interpersonal relations not working
for last few years
99Clinical Illustration
- On the AAI
- CC/Ds2 (devaluing of attachment
experiences/derogating)/E2 (angry/conflicted) - RF -1
100Clinical Illustration
- Treatment Controlling, dominant, dismissing
therapists comments - Condition for treatment back to work, accepted
after prolonged struggle - Interpretation of relationship between hostile,
grandiose, arrogant object and victim threatened
with abandonment - Generalization of this relationship to all
interpersonal conflicts interpreted consistently - Patients reflection on relationship with father
coincident with emergence of positive
transference while re-establishing relations with
men
101Clinical Illustration
- At the completion of one-year of treatment
- Interested in apparently appropriate men
however, relationships often unrequited - Volunteering in a occupational area that she
thought she might be interested - Taking non-matriculated graduate classes
- Independent study evaluations advance from
Reflective Functioning score of -1 to 6 by end of
first year of therapy - Medication low dose of Neurontin at beginning,
tapered off during year of treatment
102Clinical Illustration
- At one-year follow-up
- Effective improvement in work and interpersonal
relations - Good sexual relations with stable boyfriend
- Attending graduate school in area consistent with
interests and capacities - Occasional struggles with feelings during times
of stress (she had a cancer scare)
103Clinical Illustration
- At three-year follow-up
- Continued improvement in work and interpersonal
relations - Married good sexual relations trying to get
pregnant - Working in high-level job consistent with her
interests and intellectual capacities - Medication free
- Affect generally happy
104Mentalization, Mindfulness, and Integrated
Representation
- Slightly difference foci.
- Very similar in their hypothesized relationship
to attentional control and affective instability. - Allows appropriate distance (as opposed to
defensive distance) from events, thoughts, and
feelings.
105Mentalization, Mindfulness, and Integrated
Representation
- Thoughts, feelings, and events are not seen
concretely or experienced literally as a rigid
reality, but are experienced implicitly and
sometimes explicitly as symbolic representations
of experience, which one has some control over
(i.E., One can shift ones attention or think
differently about an event). - Events remain in perspective and lose their
re-traumatizing capacity.
106Thank You
- For more information please e-mail me at
klevy_at_psu.edu and visit the Laboratory for
Personality, Psychopathology, and Psychotherapy
website at http//levylab.psych.psu.edu -
- Also visit the Personality Disorders Institute
website at www.borderlinedisorders.com