Abstract

In intensive transactional analysis psychotherapy (ITAP), intensity is obtained with both technical expedients and the relational manner with the patient. In ITAP, the therapist modulates pressure and support commensurately to the patients' ego strength. In the present article, we contrast two clinical cases of young adults in which ego strength produced different therapy outcomes and processes. We present excerpts of the psychotherapy process that illustrates technical aspects of ITAP as well as the therapist's attitude that we describe as holding. We show quantitative therapy outcomes consisting of effects size values of changes in Clinical Outcome in Routine Evaluation—Outcome Measure scores in baseline, treatment, and follow-up phases and qualitative outcome evaluated with the Change Interview at the end of the therapy. In the patient with high ego strength, we observed a rapid improvement and a complete recovery at the end of the therapy, whereas the results of the patient with low ego strength were less consistent (more fluctuations in Clinical Outcome in Routine Evaluation—Outcome Measure scores including deterioration but good qualitative outcome). We conclude that quantitative and qualitative outcome data, together with process observations, are required to have a complete picture of therapy effectiveness. Moreover, we conclude that qualitative ego strength is not a limitation for the use of expressive therapy such as ITAP, but rather, it is an important variable that should be considered to dose confrontations and support.

Highlights

  • Intending to increase intensity in therapeutic intervention, intensive transactional analysis psychotherapy (ITAP) is short-term psychodynamic psychotherapy that integrates transactional analysis (Berne, 1961; Schiff, 1975; Goulding and Goulding, 1979) with brief psychodynamic psychotherapy approaches (Malan, 1976; Davanloo, 1994; Fosha, 2000; Abbass, 2015)

  • In addition to quantitative and qualitative outcome measures, we present excerpts of the psychotherapy process that illustrates (a) the impact of the use of ITAP triangles on impulse emersion and (b) therapist’s attitude that we describe as holding

  • We contrasted two clinical cases of patients with different levels of ego strength treated with ITAP, a new psychotherapy approach that aims toward the intensification of therapist intervention through the integration between transactional analysis and brief psychodynamic approaches

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Intending to increase intensity in therapeutic intervention, intensive transactional analysis psychotherapy (ITAP) is short-term psychodynamic psychotherapy that integrates transactional analysis (Berne, 1961; Schiff, 1975; Goulding and Goulding, 1979) with brief psychodynamic psychotherapy approaches (Malan, 1976; Davanloo, 1994; Fosha, 2000; Abbass, 2015). The therapist modulates the technique based on the level of the patient’s anxiety manifestations, holding the patient during the exploration of intrapsychic and interpersonal triangles. The therapist applies pressure and support commensurately according to the ego strength, a psychodynamic concept referring to a set of capacities including individual resilience, identity integration, personal resources, ability to maintain satisfactory interpersonal relationships, and self-esteem (Freud, 1923; Lake, 1985). In addition to quantitative and qualitative outcome measures, we present excerpts of the psychotherapy process that illustrates (a) the impact of the use of ITAP triangles on impulse emersion and (b) therapist’s attitude that we describe as holding

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