Title of article
Interpersonal Problems and Outcome in Outpatient Psychotherapy: Findings From a Long-Term Longitudinal SINTERPtERPUSOSCNHANL EPuRR,O KBRLAEFMTS, BAANUDE ORUdTCOME y in Germany
Author/Authors
BERND PUSCHNER، نويسنده , , Susanne Kraft and Stephanie Bauer، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2004
Pages
12
From page
223
To page
234
Abstract
We used a comprehensive longitudinal data set from Germany to examine trajectories of symptom
distress depending on interpersonal problems at study intake measured via the Inventory of
Interpersonal Problems–64 (IIP–64; Horowitz, Strauß, & Kordy, 1994). Participants (N = 622)
underwent mid- or long-term outpatient psychotherapy (either psychodynamically oriented
psychotherapy, cognitive behavioral therapy, or analytic psychotherapy). Data comprises up to
5 assessments during a 2-year period and was analyzed via hierarchical linear modeling. In the
analytic psychotherapy subgroup, initial symptom level was higher in submissive patients. Initial
interpersonal problems were not predictive of the rate of symptom change during therapy.
Only in psychodynamic treatments, low affiliation positively affected treatment outcome. Interpersonal
problems at intake were not related to the number of utilized sessions and utilization
rate across treatment subgroups.We discuss the findings and outline future research topics
Journal title
Journal of Personality Assessment
Serial Year
2004
Journal title
Journal of Personality Assessment
Record number
846632
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