Psychotherapy Research
Therapists' in-session experiences with depressive clients: A grounded theory
Abstracts
Objective: This study explores the experiential process of psychotherapists during a session with a currently depressive client. Method: Individual and focus group interviews were conducted with 30 therapists and the grounded theory method was used as a methodological framework. Results: The therapists' experience was conceptualized as Experiential oscillation between getting closer to a client's depressive experience and moving away from it. Its development over the course of a session is depicted by a six-phase Depression Co-experiencing Trajectory model. Conclusions: The resultant theory interconnects different therapists' emotional responses to a depressive client within a coherent process model, which allows us to track the changes in therapists' experiences, to name the relations between them, and to connect them with the therapy's in-session microprocesses.
| Journal |
Psychotherapy Research
|
| Author | |
| Year of Publication |
2014
|
| Volume |
26
|
| Number of Pages |
206-219,
|
| ISSN Number |
1050-3307
|
| DOI |
10.1080/10503307.2014.963731
|