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Mentalization Based Therapy :

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Mentalization Based Therapy : Dr Linda Treliving Consultant psychiatrist in psychotherapy, NHS Grampian Why mentalization based therapy? Evidence based Psychodynamic ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Mentalization Based Therapy :


1
Mentalization Based Therapy
  • Dr Linda Treliving
  • Consultant psychiatrist in psychotherapy, NHS
    Grampian

2
Why mentalization based therapy?
  • Evidence based
  • Psychodynamic treatment
  • Rooted in attachment and cognitive therapy
  • Requires limited training with moderate levels of
    supervision
  • Implemented by generic mental health
    professionals
  • MBT skills accessible to non mental health staff
    and is simple intervention for complex group

3
Mentalization
  • the capacity to recognise and understand the
    existence of minds, both ones own and those of
    others.
  • to recognize that human behavior is motivated by
    mental statesby things like thoughts, beliefs,
    feelings, and desires.

4
Mentalization
  • Everybody will struggle to mentalize at times
    but people with borderline PD and other diagnoses
    have more consistent difficulty and can account
    for signs and symptoms
  • Underpins clinical understanding, the
    therapeutic relationship and therapeutic change
    regardless of modality of therapy

5
What does good mentalizing looklike?
  • Perception of own mental functioning
  • appreciation of changeability
  • developmental perspective
  • awareness of impact of affect
  • Self-presentation
  • consistency in sense of self
  • General values and attitudes
  • tentativeness and moderation

6
What does non-mentalizing look like?
  • Excessive detail to the exclusion of motivations,
    feelings or thoughts.
  • Focus on external social factors, such as the
    school, the council, the neighbours.
  • Focus on physical or structural labels.
  • Preoccupation with rules, responsibilities.
  • Denial of involvement in problem.
  • Blaming or fault-finding.
  • Expressions of certainty about thoughts or
    feelings of others.

6
7
Prementalizing modes of cognition
  • psychic equivalence - the equation of ones
    mental states with reality
  • pretend mode - the dissociation of mental states
    from reality
  • teleological only action that has physical
    impact can alter mental state in self or others

8
  • Attachment Theory
  • Attachment theory is about proximity,
  • an experience of safety and the
  • consequential development of robust,
  • flexible psychological processes that
  • protect the individual from the stresses of
  • human interaction and everyday life
  • (Bowlby,1969, 1973, 1980).

9
Development of affect regulation and a positive
sense of self
  • the infants states are noted by the caregiver
  • carer communicates their understanding of the
    infants emotional experience to the infant not
    merely an expression of the carers own conflicts
    or an exact copy of the infants distress.

10
The hyperactivation ofattachment in BPD
  • The attachment system in BPD is hypersensitive
    and triggered too readily
  • Indications of attachment hyperactivity in core
  • symptoms of BPD
  • Frantic efforts to avoid abandonment
  • Pattern of unstable and intense interpersonal
    relationships
  • Rapidly escalating tempo moving from acquaintance
    to great intimacy

11
Attachment provocation in clinical situations
  • In the ward
  • Stimulation of attachment system in admission
  • Changing shifts
  • Discussing discharge
  • At interview
  • Clinician lowering voice
  • Increasing intimacy
  • Responding/refusing to demands
  • Boundary violation however small

12
BPD and attachment
  • Borderline patients have a history of
    disorganized attachment (94) which leads to
    problems in affect regulation, attention and self
    control
  • These problems are mediated through a failure to
    develop a robust mentalizing capacity

13
The development of an attachment based treatment
programme for borderline personality disorder
The mediator between the genotype and the
phenotype is the attachment process..Anthony
Bateman and Peter Fonagy Bulletin
of the Menninger Clinic
(2003) , 67,3pp187-211
14
Mentalization based therapy
  • Aims to strengthen patients capacity to
    understand their own and others mental states in
    attachment contexts in order to address
    difficulties with
  • Affect regulation
  • Impulse regulation
  • Interpersonal functioning
  • Bateman and
    Fonagy 2009

15
Mentalization based stance what does it look
like?
  • Therapist adopts a stance of inquisitive, not
    knowing
  • Alert to patients mentalizing and level of
    arousal in session
  • Intervenes to restore mentalizing
  • Maintains arousal at optimal level
  • Collaborative, normal human relationship

16
Interventions Spectrum
Supportive/empathic
Most involved
Clarification, elaboration
Basic mentalizing and challenge
Least involved
Mentalizing the relationship
17
Supportive and Empathic
  • Respectful of the patients narrative and
    expression
  • Positive/hopeful but questioning
  • Constantly check-back your understanding as I
    have understood what you have been saying is
  • Spell out emotional impact of narrative based on
    common sense psychology and personal experience

17
18
Clarification, elaboration,
  • Make behaviour explicit extensive detail of
    actions
  • Trace action to feeling
  • Re-construct the events in affective and mental
    state terms
  • challenge
  • Surprise the patients mind trip their mind back
    to a more reflective process
  • Use humour when possible

19
Interventions Spectrum
Supportive/empathic
Most involved
Clarification and elaboration
Basic mentalizing and challenge
Least involved
Mentalizing the relationship
20
Mentalizing the relationship
  • Using the feelings between the patient and
    therapist to understand how each others minds
    work.
  • Point out feelings where possible
  • Comment on recurring life patterns
  • Link these experiences to here and now
  • Pay attention to feelings engendered in the
    therapist

21
Anthony Bateman, Peter Fonagy
  • Mentalization based therapy.
  • Weekly group plus individual sessions
  • Am. J. Psychiatry 1999 15615631569
  • 18-Month Follow-Up
  • Am. J. Psychiatry 2001 15836-42
  • 8 year follow up
  • Am. J. Psychiatry 2008 165 631,

22
Results
  • Five years after discharge MBT vs TAU continued
    to show clinical and statistical superiority.
  • suicidality (23 versus 74)
  • diagnostic status (13 versus 87)
  • service use (2 years versus 3.5 years of
    psychiatric

  • outpatient treatment)
  • use of medication (0.02 versus 1.90 years taking
    three

  • or more medications)
  • global function above 60 (45 versus 10)
  • vocational status (employed or in education 3.2
    years
  • versus 1.2
    years )

23
Why mentalization based therapy?
  • Evidence based
  • Psychodynamic treatment
  • Rooted in attachment and cognitive therapy
  • Requires limited training with moderate levels of
    supervision
  • Implemented by generic mental health
    professionals
  • MBT skills accessible to non mental health staff
    and is simple intervention for complex group.

24
MBT Scotland

MBT skills, 2 day course
Plus supervision of cases
MBT basic, 3 days
Plus supervision of cases
MBT practitioner certificate
Plus supervision of cases and CPD
25
MBT Scotland
  • Thank you for listening
  • For more information contact linda.treliving_at_nhs.n
    et
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