Publication | Open Access
Unique and common mechanisms of change across cognitive and dynamic psychotherapies.
163
Citations
40
References
2009
Year
Affective NeuroscienceCognitionMental HealthPsychologySocial SciencesClinical PsychologyCognitive TherapyCognitive NeuroscienceCognitive SciencePsychiatryMedicineDiverse PsychotherapiesPsychotherapy OutcomeBehavior TherapyHuman CognitionIndividual TherapyCognitive Behavioral InterventionBehavior Change (Individual)MindfulnessDynamic PsychotherapiesCognitive DynamicsTreatment GoalBehavior ChangeCommon MechanismsTherapyPsychotherapyCompensatory SkillsPsychopathology
The goal of this article was to examine theoretically important mechanisms of change in psychotherapy outcome across different types of treatment. Specifically, the role of gains in self-understanding, acquisition of compensatory skills, and improvements in views of the self were examined. A pooled study database collected at the University of Pennsylvania Center for Psychotherapy Research, which includes studies conducted from 1995 to 2002 evaluating the efficacy of cognitive and psychodynamic therapies for a variety of disorders, was used. Patient samples included major depressive disorder, generalized anxiety disorder, panic disorder, borderline personality disorder, and adolescent anxiety disorders. A common assessment battery of mechanism and outcome measures was given at treatment intake, termination, and 6-month follow-up for all 184 patients. Improvements in self-understanding, compensatory skills, and views of the self were all associated with symptom change across the diverse psychotherapies. Changes in self-understanding and compensatory skills across treatment were predictive of follow-up symptom course. Changes in self-understanding demonstrated specificity of change to dynamic psychotherapy.
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