
Am J Psychiatry 164:1561-1567, October 2007
doi: 10.1176/appi.ajp.2007.05111853
© 2007 American Psychiatric Association
Two Primary Configurations of Psychopathology and Change in Thought Disorder in Long-Term Intensive Inpatient Treatment of Seriously Disturbed Young Adults
Sidney J. Blatt, Ph.D.,
Avi Besser, Ph.D., and
Richard Q. Ford, Ph.D.
OBJECTIVE: Change in three types of thought disorder as measured by Rorschach responses (contaminations, confabulations, and fabulized combinations) were assessed during intensive, long-term, psychodynamically oriented inpatient treatment. METHOD: Rorschach protocols for 90 seriously disturbed, treatment-resistant patients, 42 of whom were primarily preoccupied with primitive issues of interpersonal relatedness and used avoidant defenses (anaclitic patients) and 48 primarily preoccupied with primitive issues of self-definition and self-worth and used counteractive defenses (introjective patients), were evaluated at the beginning of treatment and, on average, 15 months into treatment. RESULTS: Change in anaclitic patients occurred primarily in more pathological forms of thought disorder (contaminations and confabulations) that express boundary disturbances; change in introjective patients occurred primarily in the less disturbed thought disorder (fabulized combinations) that expresses tendencies toward referential thinking. CONCLUSIONS: Seriously disturbed anaclitic and introjective patients expressed therapeutic progress in different but theoretically consistent ways.
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Am J Psychiatry 2007 164: A34.
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