Abstract

Diagnostic work with the conflict axis of the OPD-CA: Empirical results on inpatients and outpatients Abstract. In recent years, the Operationalized Psychodynamic Diagnostics (OPD-CA) is increasingly being used in child and adolescent psychiatry and psychotherapy. This article presents the conflict axis of the OPD-CA, which contains an operationalization of seven psychodynamic conflicts and the processing modes assigned to them. It describes empirical comparisons of the conflict axis ratings and the structure rating in a group of outpatient and inpatient children and adolescents (total N = 186, 12.7 years, 54 % female). The findings in the total sample show that diagnosis-specific gender differences are disappearing, and that male and female patients have largely similar intrapsychic development-impairing conflicts. Patients in inpatient treatment in a child and adolescent psychiatry institution, however, more often show a self-conflict and, as expected, have a lower structural level than patients of the same age in outpatient psychotherapy. The number of highly stressful events before the start of therapy is also significantly higher in this group, which may have contributed to the structural deficits. For outpatients, there is a strikingly higher level of guilt and identity conflicts. In both samples, the mode of processing the conflicts is largely passive. Based on these findings, possible implications for therapeutic practice are discussed.

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