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Original scientific paper

https://doi.org/10.24869/psyd.2019.325

TAKE ME BACK TO MOVE ME FORWARD: RE-ENACTMENT OF THE FAMILY SYSTEM AS A PATHWAY TO BETTER QUALITY OF LIFE FOR ALEXITHYMIC PATIENTS IN GROUP THERAPY

John S. Ogrodniczuk ; Department of Psychiatry, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada
Joanna Cheek ; Department of Psychiatry, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada
David Kealy ; Department of Psychiatry, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada
Ingrid Söchting ; Department of Psychiatry, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada; Department of Psychology, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada


Full text: english pdf 320 Kb

page 325-332

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Abstract

Background: Despite much attention in the clinical literature, research on alexithymia in the treatment setting has only recently gained traction. While several reports indicate limited benefit from therapy amongst patients with high alexithymia, this seems to be less so in the context of group therapy. This study considers a specific aspect of the group therapy process - family re-enactment - in facilitating improvement in overall quality of life for patients with high levels of alexithymia.
Subjects and methods: Family re-enactment was examined as a potential mediator of the relationship between alexithymia and change in quality of life among 50 patients who completed treatment in an intensive, integrative group therapy programme. Patients completed three self-report measures: Toronto Alexithymia Scale-20 (baseline), Quality of Life Inventory (baseline, post-therapy), and Therapeutic Factors Inventory-Short Form (week 8). Regression with mediation analysis was employed using the change score for the QOLI as the dependent variable, alexithymia scores as the independent variable, and the family re-enactment score as the mediator; baseline quality of life was included in the model as a control variable.
Results: Family re-enactment emerged as a significant mediator of the relationship between alexithymia and treatment outcome, implicating it as a contributing mechanism of change for alexithymic patients who participate in group therapy.
Conclusion: Patients with higher levels of alexithymia (in particular, difficulty identifying and describing feelings) were more likely to positively endorse aspects of family re-enactment during group therapy, which in turn were significantly associated with greater improvement in patients’ overall quality of life.

Keywords

alexithymia; group therapy; family re-enactment; mediation

Hrčak ID:

235257

URI

https://hrcak.srce.hr/235257

Publication date:

7.10.2019.

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