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 ...
Read More
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.