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The Journal of Psychotherapy Practice and Research logoLink to The Journal of Psychotherapy Practice and Research
. 1993 Summer;2(3):230–241.

Brief Dynamic Psychotherapy

Patient Suitability, Treatment Length, and Outcome

PER HØGLEND 1, TORE SØRLIE 1, OSCAR HEYERDAHL 1, ØYSTEIN SØRBYE 1, SVEIN AMLO 1
PMCID: PMC3330342  PMID: 22700148

Abstract

Forty-three neurotic outpatients were treated according to common practice with dynamic psychotherapy of brief to moderate length. Suitability for brief dynamic psychotherapy, measured by quality of interpersonal relations, was independent of DSM-III diagnoses. Suitability was a significant direct predictor of symptomatic and dynamic change 2 and 4 years after therapy. Treatment length added no explained outcome variance over patient characteristics. However, patients with high suitability had a relatively more favorable dynamic outcome with a brief, focused treatment approach, whereas patients with low suitability had relatively more favorable outcome with a longer, less focused treatment of more than 1 year’s duration. The significant interaction emerged at 4-year follow-up.

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