Recognizing oneself in the encounter with others: meaningful moments in systemic therapy for social anxiety disorder in the eyes of patients and their therapists after the end of therapy
Author
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HilzingerI, Rebecca
Author
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Duarte, Javiera
Author
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Hench, Bárbara
Author
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Hunger, Christina
Author
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Schweitzer, Jochen
Author
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Krause, Mariane
Author
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Fischersworring, Martina María
Admission date
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2021-12-09T13:30:44Z
Available date
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2021-12-09T13:30:44Z
Publication date
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2021
Cita de ítem
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PLoS ONE 16(5): e0250094
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Identifier
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10.1371/journal.pone.0250094
Identifier
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https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/183131
Abstract
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There is evidence that systemic therapy is effective, but there is little evidence about meaningful moments in systemic therapy in general, and none at all in systemic therapy for social anxiety disorders. Meaningful moments are one of the relevant research objects in change process research, as they contribute to a better understanding of therapeutic change.
Objective The objective of this study is to characterize and describe meaningful moments in the context of systemic psychotherapy, from the point of view of patients and their therapists, after the end of therapy. The therapy studied is a manualized, monitored systemic therapy for social anxiety disorder.
Method Semi-structured follow-up interviews were conducted separately with five patients and their therapists (N = 10). Methodological triangulation was used: Grounded theory was used to code the transcripts as described by Charmaz. Then the passages of the selected code "meaningful moment" were evaluated using thematic comparison, in line with Meuser & Nagel.
Findings Three categories involving meaningful moments were identified: (1) meeting other patients in group therapy session, (2) therapeutic resource orientation and (3) recognizing oneself in a diagnosis or pattern of behaviour. These categories emerged as contexts related to the occurrence of meaningful moments from a subjective perspective.
Discussion Meaningful moments seem to be consistently related to the therapist input and to specific interventions or settings, both from the perspective of the patients and the therapists. Two tandems each described a coincident moment. One central aspect of all 14 moments is that the patients and therapists described patients being able to acquire another outlook on themselves.
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Patrocinador
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ANID Millennium Science Initiative/Millennium Institute for Research on Depression and Personality MIDAP
CONICYT PFCHA-Becas 21130433
Cusanuswerk e.V.
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Lenguage
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en
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Publisher
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Public Library Science
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Type of license
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Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 United States
Recognizing oneself in the encounter with others: meaningful moments in systemic therapy for social anxiety disorder in the eyes of patients and their therapists after the end of therapy