mohsen pasbani ardabili; Ahmad Borjali; Shahla Pezeshk
Abstract
Relationship with parents plays an important role in the lives of adolescents. Conflict in the relationship causes long-term and serious damage which occurs in adolescents. This study aimed to determine the effectiveness of intensive short-term dynamic psychotherapy on improving mother-child relationship ...
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Relationship with parents plays an important role in the lives of adolescents. Conflict in the relationship causes long-term and serious damage which occurs in adolescents. This study aimed to determine the effectiveness of intensive short-term dynamic psychotherapy on improving mother-child relationship is the opposite. This quasi-experimental study with pretest and posttest approach with a 2-month-old follow-up. 16 women with children that criterion for entry to the study were randomly selected to be available in both experimental and control groups were replaced. Parent-child conflict questionnaire was used to evaluate the experimental variable. Intervention in 8 sessions were performed on women. Pretest and posttest and follow-up was 2 months, and data were collected on children. Complex multivariate analysis of variance (within a group Mass), and multivariate analysis of variance revealed a mixed two-way between the pretest and posttest, but there is a pretest and posttest control group was not different. This difference was persistent in the pursuit of two months. The results showed that intervention of intensive short-term dynamic psychotherapy in improving the quality of mother-child relationship conflict has a positive impact. This effect was significant in a 3-scale questionnaire. Results showed that the effectiveness of intensive short-term dynamic psychotherapy on both sexes was significant, and there was no significant difference between girls and boys in treatment outcomes.
Hamed Jahanbin; Ahmad Borjali; Hossein Eskandari
Abstract
This study has been conducted to investigate the efficacy of Narrative Constructive Treatment in Back to the future model on reduction of Acute Stress Disorder (ASD) symptoms. The population of the study were all women with ASD symptoms, which appeared following the exposure to car accident coma of the ...
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This study has been conducted to investigate the efficacy of Narrative Constructive Treatment in Back to the future model on reduction of Acute Stress Disorder (ASD) symptoms. The population of the study were all women with ASD symptoms, which appeared following the exposure to car accident coma of the spouse and their husband hospitalized in ICU ward of Poorsina hospital, in Rasht, during 2013 (from June to August). The sample included three women (n=3), who were selected based on purposeful sampling procedure. These cases were selected using Stanford Acute Stress Reaction Questionnaire (SASRQ). This study was a non-concurrent multiple-baseline (across participants) single-case experimental study. The intervention was conducted based on Narrative Constructive Treatment in Back to the future model. The treatment program was carried out for 13 sixty-minute sessions. In general, the study consisted of three stages including the baseline evaluation, the intervention period, and with a follow-up period of 1.5 and 3 months subsequent to treatment termination. Data were analyzed using the clinical significance (Cohen’s d) method, and findings demonstrated that all subjects who completed the treatment showed significant improvement in their ASD symptoms (d = -1.89), including dissociative (d = -1.78), re-experience (d = -1.82), avoidance (d= -2.08) and marked symptoms of anxiety or increased arousal (d = -1.88). It appears that back to the future model is effective in treating women’s ASD.