Affect Phobia Therapy for Mild to Moderate Alcohol Use Disorder: The Cases of "Carey," "Michelle," and "Mary"

My Frankl, P. Wennberg, L. Berggraf, B. Philips
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

Affect Phobia Treatment (APT) is based on an integrative theory involving the use of psychodynamic principles for understanding a client’s psychological dynamics, experiential principles for engaging and working with the client’s affect, and behavioral principles of exposure and response prevention for desensitizing the client to the fear of affect. APT’s goal is "to help patients function better by resolving emotional conflict through reducing their avoidance of adaptive, activating emotions" (Osborn et al., 2014). APT has not yet been systematically employed and researched for patients with mild to moderate Alcohol Use Disorder (AUD) together with affect phobia. The present study was designed to begin this process by describing and comparing, both qualitatively and quantitatively, three illustrative, distinctive cases of APT in patients with AUD, assigned the names of "Carey," "Michelle," and "Mary." The focus was on exploring the process by which the different individual patients responded to the multifaceted APT therapy, and hence how the therapist had to adapt the therapy to each particular patient, as outlined in Stiles’ (2009) concept of "appropriate responsiveness."  Following the manual for APT, therapy included 10 weekly sessions of individual psychotherapy. This short length for a therapy like APT, a treatment which usually has no determined session length (McCullough et al., 2003), was designed to make the therapy comparable in length to other therapies for AUD, like Motivational Interviewing. During the whole study period, patients gave weekly reports of their alcohol consumption and craving. In addition, at the beginning and at the end of the study, the patients answered questionnaires measuring affect phobia and psychiatric symptoms. Role expectations and experiences of psychotherapy were also measured. All three patients completed the treatment and the measurement period. No adverse events were reported. The patients had different trajectories of change regarding alcohol consumption, craving, and symptom change. The study showed that 10-session APT was a tolerable treatment for the patients with on-going mild-to-moderate alcohol dependence, who primarily used alcohol as a way of avoiding emotions, but that the therapy worked to different degrees and in different ways for the three patients due to their different presenting patterns of psychiatric symptoms and personality characteristics. Experience in the three cases suggests the advisability of (a) flexible treatment length in accordance to a patient's needs, and (b) complementary treatment strategies beyond APT focusing on reducing alcohol consumption per se for some patients.
轻度至中度酒精使用障碍的影响恐惧症治疗:“凯里”、“米歇尔”和“玛丽”的案例
情感恐惧症治疗(APT)基于一种综合理论,包括使用心理动力学原理来理解客户的心理动力学,使用体验原理来参与和处理客户的情感,以及暴露和反应预防的行为原理来使客户对情感恐惧不敏感。APT的目标是“通过减少患者对适应性、激活性情绪的回避来解决情绪冲突,从而帮助患者更好地发挥作用”(Osborn等人,2014)。APT尚未被系统地用于轻度至中度酒精使用障碍(AUD)和情感恐惧症患者。本研究旨在通过定性和定量描述和比较AUD患者中三个说明性的、独特的APT病例来开始这一过程,命名为“Carey”、“Michelle”和“Mary”。重点是探索不同个体患者对多方面APT治疗的反应过程,因此,治疗师必须如何根据每个特定的患者调整治疗,正如Stiles(2009)“适当反应”的概念所概述的那样。根据APT手册,治疗包括每周10次的个人心理治疗。对于像APT这样的治疗,通常没有确定的疗程长度(McCullough等人,2003),这种短的疗程长度是为了使该治疗在长度上与其他AUD治疗(如动机访谈)相当。在整个研究期间,患者每周都会报告他们的饮酒量和渴望程度。此外,在研究开始和结束时,患者回答了测量情感恐惧症和精神症状的问卷。对心理治疗的角色期望和经验也进行了测量。三名患者均完成了治疗和测量期。未报告不良事件。患者在饮酒、渴望和症状变化方面有不同的变化轨迹。研究表明,对于持续轻度至中度酒精依赖的患者来说,10次疗程的APT是一种可以忍受的治疗方法,这些患者主要将酒精作为避免情绪的一种方式,但由于三名患者的精神症状和性格特征的呈现模式不同,该疗法在不同程度上以不同的方式发挥作用。这三种情况的经验表明,(a)根据患者的需求灵活的治疗时间,以及(b)APT之外的补充治疗策略是可取的,重点是减少一些患者的饮酒量。
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