Title of article :
Tracking Sequences of Patient-Therapist Dialogues by Coding Responses During Integrative Psychotherapy
Author/Authors :
Ghamari Kivi, Hossein Department of Counseling - Faculty of Education and Psychology - University of Mohaghegh Ardabili - Ardabil, Iran , Jamshiddoust Miyanroudi, Fatemeh Department of Counseling - Faculty of Education and Psychology - University of Mohaghegh Ardabili - Ardabil, Iran
Abstract :
Objective: The Assimilation of Problematic Experiences Scale (APES) to code the
client’s responses and the Process Focused Conversation Analysis (PFCA) to code
the therapist’s responses were applied to transcripts of a successful case of integrative
psychotherapy of depression.
Methods: The method used for the present research was a case study. Dialogues (150
conversations between therapist-client on the basis of meaning) between a therapist and a
client in one case with a good outcome were coded and analyzed by two different systems
of APES and PFCA.
Results: The data revealed that combining the results of APES and PFCA is a suitable
coding system for drawing a client’s change equation. In a pyramid of therapeutic change,
questions, skills, and techniques applied by the therapist are located in the base, center,
and high level, respectively. Meanwhile, higher APES levels are located at the top of the
pyramid. The efficient intervention has to be delineated on the spot and is appropriate
for a situation in which the client is at one particular moment. Case improvement has
demonstrated that at high levels of APES, level 4 is the critical one.
Conclusion: Setbacks and stagnations are common within psychotherapy and are
generally affected by the main topic of the therapeutic conversation.
Keywords :
Coding systems , Client responses , Psychotherapy , Therapist responses
Journal title :
Practice in Clinical Psychology