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Authors
Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
The purpose of this dissertation was to analyse equivalent therapist's strategyrelated
operations and patient's strategy-related change processes as they unfold and
relate along the psychotherapeutic process as practiced in real world settings. Ideally, in
order to optimize therapeutic responsiveness and effectiveness, therapist´s operations
and patient´s processing abilities should proceed in tandem. Processing capacity was
conceptualized as the productive use, by the patient, of strategy-related change
processes or general psychological processes underlying skilful means to resolve life
challenges.
There were two research phases, both set within the framework of Paradigmatic
Complementarity. The cross-sectional study used self-report data from therapists in real
world practice, while the longitudinal study used observed data from 129 videotaped
sessions of four patients of a single therapist.
The findings from both studies suggest it is relevant to consider the sequencing
of general strategies as a phase-by-phase map of the therapeutic process. First, strategyrelated
therapist's operations and patient's change processes can be operationalized in a
equivalent format and measured with acceptable reliability, for psychotherapy as
practiced in the real-world. Second, the time patients need to show high levels of
strategy-related change processes suggests general processing capacities take months to
build up, rendering it less a moment-by-moment process. Third, strategy-related patient
change seems to unfold sequentially according to a sequence of 3, 5 or 7 dimensions,
thus providing sequential maps of intermediate outcomes before hitting termination.
Fourth, these intermediate outcomes, predict changes in final outcome, making unique
contributions over and above the therapeutic alliance, rendering them good enough
vi
candidates to stand as mechanisms of change common to any approach. Fifth and
finally, decision-making by the therapist can be responsive to this macro developmental
sequence influencing its unfolding and being influenced by it.
Limitations and implications for real-world essentially integrative
psychotherapy theory, research, practice and training are then discussed.
The purpose of this dissertation was to analyse equivalent therapist's strategyrelated operations and patient's strategy-related change processes as they unfold and relate along the psychotherapeutic process as practiced in real world settings. Ideally, in order to optimize therapeutic responsiveness and effectiveness, therapist´s operations and patient´s processing abilities should proceed in tandem. Processing capacity was conceptualized as the productive use, by the patient, of strategy-related change processes or general psychological processes underlying skilful means to resolve life challenges. There were two research phases, both set within the framework of Paradigmatic Complementarity. The cross-sectional study used self-report data from therapists in real world practice, while the longitudinal study used observed data from 129 videotaped sessions of four patients of a single therapist. The findings from both studies suggest it is relevant to consider the sequencing of general strategies as a phase-by-phase map of the therapeutic process. First, strategyrelated therapist's operations and patient's change processes can be operationalized in a equivalent format and measured with acceptable reliability, for psychotherapy as practiced in the real-world. Second, the time patients need to show high levels of strategy-related change processes suggests general processing capacities take months to build up, rendering it less a moment-by-moment process. Third, strategy-related patient change seems to unfold sequentially according to a sequence of 3, 5 or 7 dimensions, thus providing sequential maps of intermediate outcomes before hitting termination. Fourth, these intermediate outcomes, predict changes in final outcome, making unique contributions over and above the therapeutic alliance, rendering them good enough candidates to stand as mechanisms of change common to any approach. Fifth and finally, decision-making by the therapist can be responsive to this macro developmental sequence influencing its unfolding and being influenced by it. Limitations and implications for real-world essentially integrative psychotherapy theory, research, practice and training are then discussed.
The purpose of this dissertation was to analyse equivalent therapist's strategyrelated operations and patient's strategy-related change processes as they unfold and relate along the psychotherapeutic process as practiced in real world settings. Ideally, in order to optimize therapeutic responsiveness and effectiveness, therapist´s operations and patient´s processing abilities should proceed in tandem. Processing capacity was conceptualized as the productive use, by the patient, of strategy-related change processes or general psychological processes underlying skilful means to resolve life challenges. There were two research phases, both set within the framework of Paradigmatic Complementarity. The cross-sectional study used self-report data from therapists in real world practice, while the longitudinal study used observed data from 129 videotaped sessions of four patients of a single therapist. The findings from both studies suggest it is relevant to consider the sequencing of general strategies as a phase-by-phase map of the therapeutic process. First, strategyrelated therapist's operations and patient's change processes can be operationalized in a equivalent format and measured with acceptable reliability, for psychotherapy as practiced in the real-world. Second, the time patients need to show high levels of strategy-related change processes suggests general processing capacities take months to build up, rendering it less a moment-by-moment process. Third, strategy-related patient change seems to unfold sequentially according to a sequence of 3, 5 or 7 dimensions, thus providing sequential maps of intermediate outcomes before hitting termination. Fourth, these intermediate outcomes, predict changes in final outcome, making unique contributions over and above the therapeutic alliance, rendering them good enough candidates to stand as mechanisms of change common to any approach. Fifth and finally, decision-making by the therapist can be responsive to this macro developmental sequence influencing its unfolding and being influenced by it. Limitations and implications for real-world essentially integrative psychotherapy theory, research, practice and training are then discussed.
Description
Keywords
Psicoterapia Tomada de decisão Processo terapêutico Teses de doutoramento - 2011
