DO PERSONALITY PROBLEMS IMPROVE DURING PSYCHODYNAMIC SUPPORTIVE-EXPRESSIVE PSYCHOTHERAPY? SECONDARY OUTCOME RESULTS FROM A RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED TRIAL FOR PSYCHIATRIC OUTPATIENTS WITH PERSONALITY DISORDERS

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Abstract

Studies involving patients with personality disorders (PDs) have not focused on improvement of core aspects of the PD. The authors examined changes in quality of object relations, interpersonal problems, psychological mindedness, and personality traits in a sample of 156 patients with Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (4th ed.) PD diagnoses being randomized to either manualized or nonmanualized dynamic psychotherapy. Effect sizes adjusted for symptomatic change and reliable change indices were calculated. The authors found that both treatments were equally effective at reducing personality pathology. Only in neuroticism did the nonmanualized group do better during the follow-up period. The largest improvement was found in quality of object relations. For the remaining variables, only small and clinically insignificant magnitudes of change were found. © 2009 American Psychological Association.

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Vinnars, B., Thormählen, B., Gallop, R., Norén, K., & Barber, J. P. (2009). DO PERSONALITY PROBLEMS IMPROVE DURING PSYCHODYNAMIC SUPPORTIVE-EXPRESSIVE PSYCHOTHERAPY? SECONDARY OUTCOME RESULTS FROM A RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED TRIAL FOR PSYCHIATRIC OUTPATIENTS WITH PERSONALITY DISORDERS. Psychotherapy, 46(3), 362–375. https://doi.org/10.1037/a0017002

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