Mentalization-enhancing therapeutic interventions in the psychotherapy of anorexia nervosa: An analysis of use and influence on patients' mentalizing capacity

  • Alexander Ferdinand Meier
  • Almut Zeeck
  • Svenja Taubner
  • Thorsten Gablonski
  • Inga Lau
  • Romi Preiter
  • Hannes Gläser
  • Stephan Zipfel
  • Wolfgang Herzog
  • Beate Wild
  • Hans-Christoph Friederich
  • Gaby Resmark
  • Katrin Giel
  • Martin Teufel
  • Markus Burgmer
  • Andreas Dinkel
  • Stephan Herpertz
  • Bernd Löwe
  • Sefik Tagay
  • Jörn von Wietersheim
  • Martina De Zwaan
  • Armin Hartmann

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Improvement in patients' mentalizing capacities is considered a possible mechanism of change in psychotherapy. This improvement might take place via mentalization-enhancing interventions (MEIs) performed by psychotherapists. The study aimed to explore the use of MEIs in two evidence-based psychotherapeutic treatments for patients with anorexia nervosa (enhanced cognitive-behavior therapy, focal psychodynamic therapy) and their association with the patients' capacity to mentalize in sessions ("in-session reflective functioning" / in-session RF). Additionally, it was explored, if the amount of MEIs used could either predict change in in-session RF or outcome (end of treatment, one year follow-up).

METHOD: 84 audiotapes from psychotherapy sessions of 28 patients of the ANTOP-study (three sessions per patient) were transcribed and rated with both the MEI Rating Scale and the In-Session RF Scale by trained raters.

RESULTS: MEIs were applied in both treatments. A moderate correlation between the amount of MEIs and patients' in-session RF as well as its change over the course of treatment was found, but no relation to change in BMI or eating disorder symptoms.

CONCLUSION: A greater use of MEIs was related to patients' in-session-mentalizing. However, there seems to be no simple relation between RF as shown in sessions and symptom change.

Bibliografische Daten

OriginalspracheEnglisch
ISSN1050-3307
DOIs
StatusVeröffentlicht - 06.2023
PubMed 36473209