RESUMO
ABSTRACT: Mistrust is a significant problem for people with psychosis and can interfere with their capacity to engage in psychosocial treatment. In this article, the developmental trajectory of mistrust is outlined, including the impact that attachment disruption, childhood trauma, attributional biases, internalized stigma, and discrimination can have on the person's capacity to form trusting bonds with others. After this review, three elements are described that may allow for the restoration of trust: the therapist's openness to understanding the patient's experience and agenda for therapy, the therapist's effort to honestly disclose their thoughts to encourage dialogue and mutual reflection, and therapist's attempt to promote metacognition through helping the patient develop more complex representations of the minds of others. These elements are framed in the context of metacognitive reflection and insight therapy, an integrative therapy that is well suited to address mistrust through its explicit focus on metacognition and intersubjectivity.
Assuntos
Experiências Adversas da Infância , Metacognição , Transtornos Psicóticos , Humanos , Confiança , PsicoterapiaRESUMO
How a person recovers after a psychotic episode is known to be a key predictor of treatment response, impacting a person's sense of self and interpersonal relationships. An integrating recovery style, characterized by more curiosity about the psychotic episode and its potential meaning, has been shown to produce better outcomes. A novel therapeutic treatment, mentalization-based therapy for psychosis, targets the potential mechanisms (i.e., curiosity about mental states, affect modulation, and interpersonal awareness) that might foster an integrating recovery style, enabling a person to make meaning of their episode and use others to facilitate exploration. In this case study, we present the treatment of an emerging adult who sought residential treatment following her first psychotic episode and who initially presented with a guarded, dismissive approach to her symptoms and gradually formed a more integrating recovery style.