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PSYCHOTHERAPY

A university psychotherapy training program in a psychiatric hospital: 25 years of the conversational model in the treatment of patients with borderline personality disorder

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Pages 25-28 | Published online: 25 Aug 2009
 

Abstract

Objective: The aim of this paper is to describe the development, delivery and experience of a university psychotherapy training program for psychiatry trainees in a public psychiatric hospital, demonstrating that patients with severe borderline personality disorder can be treated successfully with psychodynamic psychotherapy and stressing the need for structured psychodynamic psychotherapy training in psychiatry.

Method: Two of the authors (JH and JS) were part of the first group of eight trainees supervised by Professor Russell Meares and several other experienced psychiatrists.

Results: Ninety trainees have successfully completed the course. Two hundred and forty patients have been treated by trainees in this program to date; 49 patients have dropped out.

Conclusions: The training program provided a sound psychodynamic base and an improved capacity to relate with our patients, not only in the program but also in our routine work as psychiatrists. An important public health issue and community need was addressed, which also proved to make sound economic sense as the number of patients who were treated might not have otherwise received long-term psychotherapy. An integrated process model of psychoanalytic psychotherapy – the conversational model – has evolved and continues to be offered as a 3-year part-time clinically oriented course leading to a Masters in Medicine, Psychotherapy at the University of Sydney. Several outcome studies and papers have been published and workshops have been presented both in Australia and overseas. The patients improved considerably – their self harming behaviour stopped within 6 months and they were no longer clinically depressed at the end of 1 year.

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