Abstract

Since the 1990s several research projects and empirical studies (process and outcome) on Jungian Psychotherapy have been conducted mainly in Germany and Switzerland. Prospective, naturalistic outcome studies and retrospective studies using standardized instruments and health insurance data as well as several qualitative studies of aspects of the psychotherapeutic process will be summarized. The studies are diligently designed and the results are well applicable to the conditions of outpatient practice. All the studies show significant improvements not only on the level of symptoms and interpersonal problems, but also on the level of personality structure and in every day life conduct. These improvements remain stable after completion of therapy over a period of up to six years. Several studies show further improvements after the end of therapy, an effect which psychoanalysis has always claimed. Health insurance data show that, after Jungian therapy, patients reduce health care utilization to a level even below the average of the total population. Results of several studies show that Jungian treatment moves patients from a level of severe symptoms to a level where one can speak of psychological health. These significant changes are reached by Jungian therapy with an average of 90 sessions, which makes Jungian psychotherapy an effective and cost-effective method. Process studies support Jungian theories on psychodynamics and elements of change in the therapeutic process. So finally, Jungian psychotherapy has reached the point where it can be called an empirically proven, effective method.

Highlights

  • Jungian Psychotherapy has long been accused of not giving any empirical proof of its effectiveness.In the early 1990s, the first meta-analyses of empirical studies investigating the effectiveness of psychotherapy were published

  • Several researchers claimed that there were no studies investigating the effectiveness of Jungian psychotherapy and it should be excluded from the field of psychotherapy

  • In a single case study on complex theory [13], Heisig investigated the development of complexes in the course of an analytical psychotherapy and could show that in the first phase of the therapy the complexes were reproduced in the transference relationship, whereas towards the end of therapy the ego complex could slowly separate from other complex patterns which can be understood as a process of ego strengthening

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Summary

Introduction

Jungian Psychotherapy has long been accused of not giving any empirical proof of its effectiveness. Several researchers claimed that there were no studies investigating the effectiveness of Jungian psychotherapy and it should be excluded from the field of psychotherapy. This motivated several Jungian training institutes, namely Zurich, Berlin and. Prospective, naturalistic outcome studies and retrospective studies using standardized instruments and health insurance data as well as several qualitative studies of aspects of the psychotherapeutic process were conducted mainly in Germany and Switzerland. The results of these studies will be summarized and critically reviewed in this article. Even though two Jungian studies described below applied a retrospective design, they reached a high validity through careful design

Overview of Jungian Empirical Studies
Researchers
Therapists
Patients
Results
Follow-up
San Francisco Psychotherapy Research Project
Berlin Catamnestic Study
Konstanz-Studie—A German replication of Seligman’s Consumer Reports Study
Discussion
Findings
Prospects
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