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The aim of the study was to analyze gender differences in life expectancy free of depressive symptoms among the adult population in Chile between 2003 and 2016. The Sullivan method was used to estimate the total and marginal life expectancy, based on prevalence data from the National Health Survey (2003, 2010 and 2016), and abridged life tables for the Chilean population. There was a compression of morbidity among middle-aged men during the first period and among younger and older women during the last one. Men at all ages could expect to live a higher proportion of their lives without depressive symptoms during the whole period. The gender gap in the proportion of life expectancy free of depressive symptoms reached 10 percent points or more, considering almost all ages and periods. Unemployment and lower education increased the probability of depressive symptoms, and these effects were more marked among women. Public policies should have a gender-sensitive approach to address the gap in depression and the disadvantage experienced by women in life expectancy free of depressive symptoms, considering those dimensions that intersect with gender, such as access to education, employment or income.
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OBJECTIVE: To explore the associations between early adverse stress, attachment insecurity in adulthood (anxious and avoidant), pathological personality styles (self-criticism and dependency), difficulties in emotion regulation, and depression severity. METHODS: Cross-sectional study of 178 outpatients diagnosed with major depression in Santiago, Chile. Participants filled the Childhood Trauma Questionnaire Short Form, the Experience in Close Relationships Scale, the Depressive Experience Questionnaire, the Difficulties in Emotion Regulation Scale, and the Patient Health Questionnaire-9 item. Full-information maximum likelihood path analyses with bias-corrected bootstrapped confidence intervals were conducted. RESULTS: Anxious attachment in adulthood and self-criticism mediated the association between early adverse stress and depression severity through their effects on difficulties in emotion regulation. Early adverse stress was not associated with avoidant attachment in adulthood and dependency; these variables were indirectly associated with depression severity. Difficulties in emotion regulation were exclusively directly related to depression severity, mediating the effects of the preceding variables. CONCLUSIONS: Our findings propose an integrative model for psychological mechanisms mediating between early adverse stress and depression. Difficulties in emotion regulation should be considered when treating adults with depression exposed to early adverse stress. The contribution of specific types of early adverse stressors and difficulties in emotion regulation should be further explored.
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Brief psychodynamic psychotherapy has gained importance in current clinical practice. To achieve brevity, a focus must be established and worked through. Different conceptualizations have emphasized the relational patterns and/or conflict foci as central but adopting a mono-schematic approach. However, patients come to treatment with more than one issue that must be addressed. Thus, another focus must be included because of its relevance, i.e., personality functioning. The aims of this study were to identify the presence and depth level of three foci (relational pattern, conflict, and personality functioning) in episodes of change throughout the process, and to evaluate the relationship of each focus with the complexity of patients' change. Initial OPD foci and the presence and depth of each were evaluated in 13 successful brief psychodynamic therapies. Change episodes of those therapies were analyzed as well. Results showed differences between foci in the initial phase with a higher presence of conflict focus. Throughout the process, only the presence and level of personality functioning improved. Also, complexity of patients' change was related to conflict focus, specifically on the emergence of competence feelings. The results provide evidence and enrich process research of brief psychodynamic therapies.
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BACKGROUND: Studies show that 16% to 77% of psychotherapy patients abandon therapy within the first sessions. The aim of this study is to examine how patient personality variables, specifically the patients' structural integration and the personality traits dependency and self-criticism, are associated with symptomatic change and therapy dropout. METHOD: We analysed data from 96 patients (age: M = 30.56, SD = 11.39; 78.5% women; 44.6% students, 28.3% employees). A hierarchical logistic regression analysis was carried out to determine whether patients' structural integration (assessed via the OPD-SQ) and their level of dependency and self-criticism (DEQ) can predict therapy dropout. In addition, a multiple regression was used to analyse how these variables affect symptomatic change (OQ-45.2 symptom subscale). RESULTS: The interaction of structural integration level and dependency best predicts therapy dropout. For the prediction of symptomatic change, both structural integration and dependency were significant. However, their interaction showed no significant results. DISCUSSION: The patient's structural integration was associated to both symptomatic change and dropout. Therapists' training should include techniques addressing patients' structural integration and degree of dependency to prevent patient dropout from therapy.
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Trastornos de la Personalidad , Personalidad , Femenino , Humanos , Masculino , Pacientes Desistentes del Tratamiento , Trastornos de la Personalidad/terapia , Psicoterapia , Autoevaluación (Psicología) , EstudiantesRESUMEN
Mentalizing, conceived as the capacity to attribute intentional mental states as implicit or underlying behavior of an individual or others, has gained interest within psychodynamic clinical research due to its potential as a change mechanism. Variations and qualities of mentalization have been studied through reflective functioning (RF). But only few studies are analyzing it throughout the psychotherapeutic interaction, identifying its level for therapists and patients. In contrast, brief psychodynamic therapy has a long tradition for establishing a focus to be worked upon. Lately, a multischematic focus has arisen, considering both conflict and personality functioning focuses as key elements on successful psychotherapies. This study aimed to identify mentalizing manifestations of patients and therapists through change episodes of one successful brief psychodynamic therapy and establish the relationship between these mentalizing manifestations and the type and depth of the therapeutic focus being worked on (conflict or personality functioning). Only 37.5% of speaking turns were able to be coded with RF; 77% of these had moderate to high RF and 22% had low or failure RF. The patient had 91% of low or failure RF, while the therapist only had 9% of low or failure RF. As for moderate to high RF, patients had 39%, while therapists had 61%. The patient showed a similar number of low or failure RF interventions and moderate to high RF interventions in conflict episodes. Meanwhile, the therapist only performs moderate to high-level RF interventions. In episodes in which personality functioning is worked on, both patient and therapist show a greater presence of interventions of moderate to high levels of RF. Finally, mentalizing interactions and non-mentalizing interactions were found on segments with conflict, and only mentalizing interactions were found on personality functioning segments.
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As we all know, COVID-19 has impacted the entire world. Quarantine disrupts people's lives, with high levels of stress and negative psychological impacts. Studies carried out mostly in the Far East, Europe, or the United States have started to provide evidence on survivors, frontline healthcare workers, and parents. The present study is the first survey to be carried out in Latin America (in Santiago, the capital of Chile). It aims to (a) explore the perceived psychological impact and future concerns; (b) evaluate vulnerability factors; (c) describe the perceived psychological impacts on participants whose psychological help and actual online psychotherapy was interrupted; and (d) explore the future need for psychological help. Procedure: An online survey was carried out (the first 2 weeks of lockdown in Santiago), which included sociodemographic data, perceived psychological impact, future concerns, and questions about psychological support. Participants: A total of 3,919 subjects answered, mostly women (80%). Results: The main perceived psychological impacts were concern (67%) and anxiety (60%). Future concerns were: general health (55.3%), employment (53.1%), and finances (49.8%). Younger participants had a greater perceived psychological impact (p's < 0.01) and concerns about employment, finances, mental health, stigma, and general health (p's < 0.001). Women reported more perceived psychological impact than men (p's < 0.05). Men reported mainly boredom (χ2 = 11.82, gl = 1, p < 0.001). Dependent employees experienced more boredom, anxiety, distress, sleep problems, an inability to relax, and a lack of concentration than the self-employed (p's < 0.05). While the latter reported future concerns about employment and finances (p's < 0.001), dependent employees reported them on their general and mental health (p's < 0.001). Regarding psychological support, 22% of participants were receiving it before lockdown. They showed more perceived psychological impact than those who were not (p's < 0.01), and 7% of them had online psychotherapy, reporting excellent (32.1%) or odd but working (65.2%) results. Finally, of the total sample, almost half of the participants (43.8%) felt they would need emotional support after this pandemic, and these are the ones that also showed higher perceived psychological impact (p's < 0.001). This study confirms the presence of perceived negative emotional impact and concerns about the future. Also, there are vulnerable groups, such as women, younger people, the self-employed, and people with psychological processes that were interrupted.
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Background: Depressive disorder is one of the main health problems worldwide. Many risk factors have been associated with this pathology. However, while the association between risks factors and adult depression is well established, the mechanisms behind its impact remains poorly understood. A possible, yet untested explanation is the mediating impact of levels of personality functioning, i.e., impairments with regard to self and interpersonal. Method: Around 162 patients were assessed at the beginning of their therapy, with regard to risk factors, such as sociodemographic, physical, hereditary (Information Form), and adverse childhood experiences (ACE; CTQ). Depressive symptoms (Beck Depression Inventory, BDI) and personality functioning (OPD-SQ) were also measured. Associations between the related variables as well as other possible covariates were examined by means of zero-order correlations and bootstrapping-based mediation analysis. Results: Of all the risk factors taken into account, level of education and physical illness were associated with depression. On the other hand, the most significant predictor of depressive symptomatology was ACE, and this relationship was mediated by personality functioning. This indicates that patients presenting adverse childhood experiences are more likely to develop deficiencies in personality functioning, which in turn increases their likelihood of developing depressive symptomatology. Conclusion: These results reaffirm the importance of incorporating risk and vulnerability factors such as personality functioning in understanding depression.
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INTRODUCTION: Brief dynamic psychotherapy has been increasingly important in the actual clinical practice. For its brevity, focalization must be accomplished. The work on focus consolidates the material, abbreviates psychotherapy, and is considered to be a change mechanism. Operationalized Psychodynamic Diagnosis OPD-2 proposes a concept of focus as the specific problem areas that are significant for patient's psychodynamics, in terms of relational pattern, inner conflicts, and structural vulnerabilities. The study on foci becomes a research and clinical imperative, where change on foci must be considered. AIMS & METHODS: This study aimed to (1) identify foci in change episodes and (2) establish the relationship between them during the process. A multiple single-subject design was used, considering the analysis of 13 outpatient psychotherapies done as treatment as usual (average of 18 sessions each process). OPD-2and Level of Presence of Foci were used to identify foci worked by therapist and patient during change episodes, already codified in a previous research usign the list of Generic Change Indicators. RESULTS & DISCUSSION: 208 change episodes were analysed. Conflict focus relates inversely with structural focus at the initial phase, and the latter appears to increase during the process. Some focus relates to different levels of patients change. Results are discussed in their clinical relevance. (AU)
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Atención , Psicoterapia Psicodinámica , MétodosRESUMEN
Van Praag states that the underlying psychic dysfunctions in psychopathology must be evaluated (and treated) in patient-centered treatments. In line with this idea, Blatt and colleagues propose the concept of self-critical (introjective) and dependent (anaclitic) functioning. The research program Millennium Initiative has studied self-critical and dependent functioning from different perspectives. The general aim of this paper is to share the results of the program that have contributed to clinical psychotherapeutic thinking. Its first specific aim is to summarize results reported elsewhere that support the predictive value of introjective and anaclitic functioning (Part I), while its second specific aim is to report original data that account for the structural functioning of personality underlying these two constructs (Part II). The results (Part I) show that self-critical functioning is associated with greater reactivity to stress (according to cortisol level in stress tasks) and less subjective awareness of stress, reduced performance in general tasks, and lower mentalization (errors in reading faces); also, patients with introjective (self-critical) depression receiving psychotherapy have more symptoms at onset, higher dropout rates, and poorer response to interventions than anaclitic (dependent) patients. Higher self-criticism was associated with higher depression scores; also, when comparing clinical and nonclinical samples, the latter showed less self-criticism. Therefore, self-critical functioning represents a challenge for researchers and clinicians. The evaluation of the structural functioning of personality showed (Part II) that self-critical functioning is associated with less integrated levels of structure and more depressive symptoms. This functioning is underlain by vulnerabilities in the abilities regulating object relationships and attachments to internal objects. Dependent functioning is associated with vulnerabilities in self-perception, self-regulation, and attachments to external objects. The psychotherapeutic implications of these results are discussed, paying special attention to aspects connected with structure-oriented psychotherapy.
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The purpose of this study is to improve the current understanding of the relation between depression and attachment through the evaluation of the role of personality styles (dependent vs self-critical) and social support in this association. These variables were studied in a clinical sample of 70 depressed outpatients (83% women; M=41.47 years, SD=12.91). Depressive symptomatology was assessed through the Beck Depression Inventory, adult attachment through the Experiences in Close Relationships Scale, social support through the Social Support Questionnaire and dependency and self-criticism through the Depressive Experiences Questionnaire. Mediational and moderation regression analyses were performed. Results show that the association between the dimensions of attachment (anxiety and avoidance) and depression was partially mediated by self-criticism. Furthermore, results demonstrate the role of social support as a moderating variable: when the level of satisfaction with social support was low and the anxiety dimension in the attachment scale was high, as avoidance increased, depressive symptoms increased as well. Results are discussed in relation to their importance for understanding the complex interplay of the variables involved in depression.
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La investigación ha demostrado la fuerte relación entre alianza terapéutica y resultados en psicoterapia. Una buena alianza está asociada a mejores resultados en psicoterapia. Para medir alianza se han desarrollado una serie de instrumentos para terapeutas, pacientes, y observadores. Los instrumentos observacionales son menos intrusivos, disminuyendo los posibles efectos que las mediciones tendrían en el tratamiento. Además, han resultado más válido en algunas poblaciones clínicas. En Chile no se cuenta con un instrumento confiable y validado que mida alianza terapéutica desde la perspectiva de un observador. El presente artículo da cuenta de la traducción al castellano, y la adaptación y validación del WorkAlliance Inventory (WAI-0) en su versión observacional para Chile. El (WAI-0) es un instrumento válido y confiable para medir alianza terapéutica.
Research has shown the strong association between therapeutic alliance and therapeutic outcomes. A good alliance is linked with better outcomes in psychotherapy. A number of instruments have been developed to measure the alliance aimed at therapists, patients, and observers. Observational instruments are less intrusive, and reduce the possible effects that measurements may have on treatment. In addition, they have proven to be more valid in some clinical populations. In Chile, there are no reliable and validated instruments to measure the therapeutic alliance from the point of view of an observer. The present article introduces a translation into Spanish along with an adaptation and validation for Chile of the Work Alliance Inventory (WAI-O) in its observational version. WAI-O is a valid and reliable instrument for measuring the therapeutic alliance.
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Conducta Cooperativa , Encuestas y Cuestionarios , Psicoterapia/métodos , Traducciones , Reproducibilidad de los Resultados , Terapia Combinada , Variaciones Dependientes del ObservadorRESUMEN
Clients', therapists', and observers' identification of change was studied in 27 therapeutic processes, and agreement on the amount, temporal location, and content of change was related to outcome. Results show that clients reported more changes in successful therapies. Client-therapist temporal match of change moments was low irrespective of outcome. Results from all three perspectives were consistent in that manifestation of new behaviors and emotions was the most representative content of change among all therapies. Meanwhile, client-therapist agreement on the frequency of grouped change indicators reported was associated with positive outcome, whereas client-observer agreement was related to negative outcome. Therapists and observers agreed in both successful and nonsuccessful therapies. The relationship between agreement and therapeutic outcome is discussed in relation to each dimension of analysis.
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Relaciones Profesional-Paciente , Psicoterapia , Adolescente , Adulto , Emociones , Femenino , Humanos , Masculino , Recuerdo Mental , Persona de Mediana Edad , Procesos Psicoterapéuticos , Psicoterapia/métodos , Psicoterapia/normas , Resultado del Tratamiento , Adulto JovenRESUMEN
As described by many theorists, emotional expressions contribute to the activation and regulation of personal emotional experiences and communicate something about internal states and intentions. These emotional expressions can be observed in the words used in our speech and nonverbal behaviors, even when nonverbal behaviors are synchronized to one's own speech or to the speech of others. Using a quantitative and qualitative methodology, this article reports a classification of verbal emotional expressions of both psychotherapists and patients in change episodes. Assuming that the emotions loaded in linguistic contents are explicit emotions shown by emotion words, this methodology allows for a complete and differentiating assessment of affective qualities in both patients and psychotherapists during the psychotherapeutic dialogue.
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Afecto , Comunicación , Emoción Expresada , Relaciones Profesional-Paciente , Psicoterapia/métodos , Conducta Verbal , Adulto , Femenino , Humanos , Masculino , Teoría Psicológica , Medio Social , Encuestas y Cuestionarios , Resultado del Tratamiento , VocabularioRESUMEN
El presente artículo tiene como objetivo presentar el resultado de una revisión teórica de los conceptos asociados a dificultades en psicoterapia desde distintas perspectivas y niveles de análisis, para luego proponer una estructura que permita sintetizar, diferenciar y comparar los distintos conceptos y hallazgos relevantes que tienen que ver con el amplio espectro de las dificultades en psicoterapia. Los conceptos relativos a las dificultades en psicoterapia fueron organizados como variables de input, proceso y output, dentro del proceso terapéutico, para finalmente realizar una discusión acerca de las implicancias teóricas, clínicas y especialmente metodológicas en el estudio de las dificultades en psicoterapia.
This article presents a theoretical systematization of concepts regarding psychotherapeutic difficulties, from different perspectives and leVELs of analysis. It proposes a theoretical structure that allows comparing, differentiating and synthesizing the multiple concepts and empirical findings regarding psychotherapeutic difficulties. Concepts were organized as input, process and output variables along the therapeutic process, finally discussing theoretical, clinical and methodological implications in the study of therapeutic difficulties.
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Humanos , Investigación , Metodología como un Tema , Psicoterapia , Relaciones Profesional-PacienteRESUMEN
Drawing on the speech acts theory, a linguistic pattern was identified that could be expected to be associated to therapeutic change, characterized by being uttered in the first person singular and present indicative, and by being self-referential in its propositional content. The frequency of the pattern was examined among verbalizations defined as change moments in three therapies with different theoretical orientation. Results show that the majority of change moments have the specified pattern, and that this pattern is significantly more frequent in change moments than in random non-change-related verbalizations, and so, it does not pertain to therapeutic conversation in general. Implications are discussed concerning the possibility of using the linguistic pattern as an additional and complementary criterion in the identification of moments of change in the therapeutic process.
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Lenguaje , Psicoterapia/métodos , Habla , Conducta Verbal , Adulto , Femenino , HumanosRESUMEN
In-session change episodes were studied in four psychotherapeutic processes: a brief psychodynamic, a psychodynamic-cognitive, a family social-constructionist, and a group integrative therapy. A qualitative confirmatory methodology was applied to assess observed and video-recorded sessions. The analysis instrument was a hierarchical list of generic qualitative indicators, common to different psychotherapeutic modalities, whose presence and content was determined through an intersubjective consent of the research group, therapists of different orientations. Results show that it is possible to identify change moments by observation; the contents of change, evident through the indicators, are generic; and, the change indicators identify the moment of evolution of the therapeutic process and the antiquity of the consultants, having a predictive value that is also of practical relevance.
Se estudiaron episodios de cambio en cuatro procesos de psicoterapia: psicoanalítica breve, psicoanalítico-cognitiva, familiar construccionista-social e integrativa de grupo. Se aplicó metodología cualitativa, confirmatoria, a sesiones observadas y grabadas en audio y video. El instrumento de análisis fue una jerarquía de indicadores de cambio genéricos, comunes a diferentes modalidades psicoterapéuticas, cuya presencia y contenido se determinó a partir del consenso intersubjetivo del grupo de investigadores-psicoterapeutas de formaciones teóricas distintas. Los resultados muestran que es posible identificar los momentos de cambio; los contenidos del cambio son efectivamente genéricos; y, los indicadores de cambio identifican el momento de evolución de las terapias y la antigüedad de los consultantes, pudiendo tener un valor predictivo que es de relevancia no sólo teórica, sino también práctica.
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El presente artículo es parte de una investigación de proceso terapéutico, orientada al descubrimiento de las interacciones que favorecen el cambio experimentado durante la psicoterapia. Específicamente, persigue la fundamentación teórica y metodológica para un análisis de la conversación terapéutica -a través de la teoría de los actos de habla- en episodios de cambio identificados previamente por medio del estudio de momentos de cambio. Para los efectos de este trabajo, interesa como unidad de análisis el acto de habla ilocutivo, conceptualizado como aquel que se realiza al decir algo. Su estructura contiene un indicador de función, fuerza ilocutiva y un indicador de contenido proposicional, recogiendo la performatividad, al conectar acción y lenguaje. Se describen las condiciones de performatividad en los episodios de cambio intra-sesión que, en el proceso psicoterapéutico y al alero de una teoría del cambio subjetivo, implican por parte del paciente y terapeuta un acuerdo ilocutivo a nivel de indicador de función, fuerza ilocutiva, y contenido proposicional.