|
A Primer
for Transference-Focused Psychotherapy
for Borderline Personality Disorder
| Table
of Contents |
Frank
E. Yeomans, MD, PhD
John F. Clarkin, PhD
Otto F. Kernberg, MD
Published
by
Jason Aronson.
Northvale, NJ (2002) |
This
Primer responds to the need for a succinct yet thorough introduction
to TFP. It is written at a level for both beginning therapists and experienced
psychodynamic therapists who want to tailor their work to the borderline
patient. In
the Primer, we have made every effort to explain Transference-Focused-Psychotherapy
in a way that is "user-friendly" and practical for the practicing
therapist. You can review the table of contents to get a sense of how
the Primer is organized.
Preface
PART
I:
WHO ARE THE PATIENTS? DIAGNOSTIC ISSUES
1. What is borderline
personality disorder (BPD)?
2. What is the borderline personality organization (BPO) and how does
it provide a broader understanding and conceptual framework than borderline
personality disorder (BPD)?
3. What is identity diffusion?
4. What is reality testing?
5. What are primitive defense mechanisms?
6. What is object relations theory and how does it apply to borderline
personality and transference-focused psychotherapy (TFP)?
7. How are defense mechanisms understood in terms of internalized object
relations?
8. How does the development of internal psychological structure differ
in normal individuals as compared to individuals with borderline personality?
9. What is psychic structure?
10. Are there circumstances in which adults who are not borderline function
at a split level of psychic organization?
11. In the primitively organized split psyche, what interactions might
be expected within and among the object relations dyads?
12. How does one assess for BPO and BPD?
13. What are the origins of borderline personality organization?
PART
II:
WHAT IS THE ESSENCE OF THE TREATMENT?
14. What is TFP?
15. What are the patient inclusion and exclusion criteria for TFP?
16. Aside from the strict exclusion criteria, are there other
prognostic factors?
17. What kind of change can be expected from TFP?
18. How does TFP modify traditional psychodynamic psychotherapy to create
a treatment specific to borderline patients?
19. What are the principle alternative treatments for BPD and BPO?
PART
III:
TREATMENT STRATEGIES
20. What is the
concept of treatment strategies?
21. What are the specific treatment strategies?
PART
IV:
TREATMENT TACTICS
22. What are the
treatment tactics?
PART
IV-A:
TACTIC #1CONTRACT SETTING
23. Does therapy
start with the first session?
24. What constitutes an adequate evaluation?
25. Is it possible to include others, beside the patient, in the evaluation
process?
26. What does the therapist say to the patient after arriving at a diagnostic
impression?
27. When is the treatment contract set with the patient?
28. What therapeutic concepts underlie the treatment contract?
29. What are the universal elements of the treatment contract?
30. What are the elements of the contract that are specific to the individual
patient?
31. How do I keep anxiety about the possibility of patients killing
themselves from distracting me from my work?
32. What about patients who call very frequently?
33. What calls are appropriate?
34. What is done if the patient breaks the treatment contract?
35. When and how does a therapist shift from the contract-setting phase
of therapy to the therapy itself?
36. What are the most common ways therapists have to intervene to protect
the treatment frame?
37. What is the concept of secondary gain and why is it important to
eliminate it?
PART
T=IV-B:
CHOOSING THE PRIORITY THEME TO ADDRESS
38. Given the amount
of data therapists are exposed to in a session, how do they decide what
to address?
39. What are the economic, dynamic, and structural principles that guide
the therapist's attention?
40. What are the three channels of communication??
41. What is the hierarchy of priorities with regard to material presented
in a session?
42. How does the therapist use this hierarchy from moment to moment
in the course of a session?
43. Which items on this list generally present a special challenge to
the therapist?
44. Is there a strict separation between the addressing obstacles to
therapy and the analytic work itself?
PART
IV-C:
THE REMAINING TACTICS
45. How does the
therapist maintain the balance between expanding incompatible views
of reality between patient and therapist and establishing common elements
of reality?
46. Why is it important to maintain an awareness of analyzing both the
positive and negative aspects of the transference?
PART
V
TREATMENT TECHNIQUES
47. What are the
techniques used in TFP?
48. What is meant by clarification in TFP?
49. What is meant by confrontation in TFP?
50. What is meant by interpretation?
51. What are the different levels of interpretation?
52. How should interpretations be delivered?
53. How does the therapist go about the transference analysis of primitive
defenses?
54. What is technical neutrality and how does the therapist manage it
in TFP?
55. How do therapists monitor their countertransference and integrate
what they learn from it into the treatment?
PART
VI:
COURSE OF TREATMENT AFTER THE CONTRACT
56. What are the
phases of TFP?
57. Does treatment generally demonstrate a linear progression?
58. What are some of the early problems that may be encountered in carrying
out the treatment?
Early problems
ITesting the frame/contract
59. Early problems IlThe meaningful communication is subtle and
is in the patients' actions more than in his or her words.
60. Early problems IllThe therapist has difficulty with how important
the therapist has become to the patient.
61. Flow does the therapist manage affect storms?
62. What are the signs of progress in TFP?
63. What are the signs that the patient is nearing the termination of
therapy and how does the therapist conceptualize and discuss termination?
PART
VII:
SOME TYPICAL TREATMENT TRAJECTORIES
64. Is it possible
to delineate some typical treatment trajectories that illustrate TFP
principles as
the therapy evolves?
A.
A1.
B.
C.
D.
|
The
patient with a chronic paranoid transference who desperately fights
his underlying longing for attachment.
How does the
therapist integrate material from the past into the focus on the
transference?
The patient whose
aggression is split-off from consciousness and emerges only in action.
The patient who
controls the therapy.
The patient with
narcissistic personality and prominent antisocial features who begins
therapy with a psychopathic transference. |
PART
VIII:
COMMON COMPLICATIONS OF TREATMENT
65. How does the
therapist deal with the threat of the patient dropping out of treatment?
66. Are patients with childhood sexual and/or physical abuse capable
of engaging in TFP?
67. Is hospitalization ever indicated in the course of treatment?
68. If the patient is hospitalized, should the therapist meet with the
patient in the hospital?
69. What is the role of medications in TFP?
70. Who should prescribe the medications?
71. What are the most typical transference meanings of medication?
72. How does one handle crises around interruptions in the treatment?
73. How does the therapist deal with intense eroticized transferences?
PART
IX:
REQUIREMENTS FOR DOING TFP
74. What are the
basic skills needed to do this treatment?
75. What forms and levels of supervision are necessary/advisable?
PART
X:
PRACTICAL QUESTIONS
IN DELIVERING THE TREATMENT
76. How does one
get consultation on the TIP treatment of BPO patients or organize a
supervision group?
77. How does one cover these patients when the therapist is away?
78. What if I work in a clinic that does not support twice-a-week therapy?
79. Is there empirical data to show that TFP is effective?
A Final Note
Index

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