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- Title
Augmenting Psychiatric Risk Management: Practical Applications of Transference- Focused Psychotherapy (TFP) Principles.
- Authors
Hersh, Richard
- Abstract
Risk management challenges in psychiatry are made more complicated when they involve the treatment of patients with primary or co-occurring personality disorder pathology. Principles of transference-focused psychotherapy (TFP), a treatment empirically validated for borderline personality disorder (BPD) and with utility for patients with varying personality disorder presentations, are practical, commonsense measures that can guide clinicians in these difficult matters. Applied TFP principles are useful in this area even when clinicians are not engaged in an extended individual psychotherapy. Central to the TFP approach are: (1) an openness to identifying personality disorder pathology; (2) a deliberate process to assess personality disorder diagnoses with attention to severity of illness; (3) an emphasis on the informed consent process, which includes sharing fully with the patient the clinician's diagnostic impression with germane psychoeducation; (4) an expectation for timely contacts at the outset of treatment with prior practitioners and with family members, when indicated; and (5) the development and maintenance of a treatment frame. TFP stresses the active monitoring of three channels of communication (what the patient says, how the patient behaves, and the clinician's countertransference) as a guiding precept that informs clinical decision-making. TFP principles can serve as a useful risk management "checklist" by organizing a clinician's approach to inherently confounding material.
- Subjects
PSYCHOTHERAPY; BORDERLINE personality disorder; DIALECTICAL behavior therapy; COUNTERTRANSFERENCE (Psychology); PERSONALITY disorders; TRANSFERENCE (Psychology)
- Publication
Psychodynamic Psychiatry, 2019, Vol 47, Issue 4, p441
- ISSN
2162-2590
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1521/pdps.2019.47.4.441