Patient personality and therapist responses in the psychotherapy of adolescents with depressive disorders: toward the


Journal

Research in psychotherapy (Milano)
ISSN: 2239-8031
Titre abrégé: Res Psychother
Pays: Italy
ID NLM: 101684638

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
27 Mar 2024
Historique:
received: 21 01 2024
accepted: 16 03 2024
medline: 29 3 2024
pubmed: 29 3 2024
entrez: 29 3 2024
Statut: aheadofprint

Résumé

Depressive disorders in adolescence pose unique challenges for assessment and treatment, particularly due to their high comorbidity with various personality disorders. Moreover, young depressed patients may elicit very intense and difficult-to-manage emotional responses in therapists (in this context, countertransference). This study aimed at empirically identifying specific personality disorders (or subtypes) among adolescents with depressive pathology and exploring distinct countertransference patterns emerging in their psychotherapy: 100 adolescents (58 with depressive disorders; 42 with other clinical conditions) were assessed by their respective clinicians (n=100) using the psychodiagnostic chart-adolescent of the Psychodynamic Diagnostic Manual (PDM) - second edition, and the therapist response questionnaire for adolescents. Results showed that depressed adolescent patients exhibited marked traits of four personality subtypes (i.e., depressive, anxious-avoidant, narcissistic, and borderline) characterized by different levels of mental functioning and personality organization. These subtypes were predictably related to specific clinicians' emotional responses, even when controlling for the intensity of depressive symptomatology. Patients with depressive or anxious-avoidant personality subtypes evoked more positive countertransference responses, whereas patients with narcissistic or borderline subtypes elicited strong and hard-to-face emotional responses in therapists. Consistent with the next edition of the PDM, the study emphasizes the importance of comprehensive psychodynamic assessment in the developmental age, which frames depressive disorders in the context of accurate emerging personality and mental functioning profiles. This approach, which also relies heavily on the clinician's subjective experience in therapy, provides crucial information on how to specifically tailor interventions that more effectively meet the needs of adolescents with these heterogeneous and complex clinical conditions.

Identifiants

pubmed: 38551500
doi: 10.4081/ripppo.2024.752
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Auteurs

Annalisa Tanzilli (A)

Department of Dynamic and Clinical Psychology, and Health Studies, Sapienza University of Rome. annalisa.tanzilli@uniroma1.it.

Flavia Fiorentino (F)

Department of Dynamic and Clinical Psychology, and Health Studies, Sapienza University of Rome. flavia.fiorentino@uniroma1.it.

Marianna Liotti (M)

Department of Dynamic and Clinical Psychology, and Health Studies, Sapienza University of Rome. marianna.liotti@uniroma1.it.

Gabriele Lo Buglio (G)

Department of Dynamic and Clinical Psychology, and Health Studies, Sapienza University of Rome. gabriele.lobuglio@uniroma1.it.

Ivan Gualco (I)

Center for Individual and Couple Therapy, Genoa. ivangualco@gmail.com.

Vittorio Lingiardi (V)

Department of Dynamic and Clinical Psychology, and Health Studies, Sapienza University of Rome. vittorio.lingiardi@uniroma1.it.

Carla Sharp (C)

Department of Psychology, University of Houston, TX. csharp2@uh.edu.

Riccardo Williams (R)

Department of Dynamic and Clinical Psychology, and Health Studies, Sapienza University of Rome. riccardo.williams@uniroma1.it.

Classifications MeSH