Inhibitors and facilitators of compassion-focused imagery in personality disorder.

Clin Psychol Psychother

Research Department of Clinical, Educational and Health Psychology, University College London, London, UK.

Published: March 2018

AI Article Synopsis

  • Compassion-focused therapy (CFT) may help clients with personality disorders (PD) who struggle with feelings of shame and self-criticism, but these clients often find CFT techniques difficult to use.
  • The study tested a specific CFT technique called compassion-focused imagery (CFI) on 53 participants, exploring how mood and mental imagery skills affect their ability to experience self-compassion during the exercises.
  • Results indicated that while CFI can improve self-compassion, challenges like negative mood and poor mental imagery skills hinder effectiveness, suggesting that those with these issues might need different therapeutic approaches.

Article Abstract

Background: Compassion-focused therapy (CFT) has potential to benefit clients with a personality disorder (PD), given the inflated levels of shame and self-criticism in this population. However, clinical observation indicates that clients with PD may find techniques from this approach challenging.

Aims: The aim of this study is to trial one aspect of CFT, compassion-focused imagery (CFI), with this population, and identify factors that predict clients' ability to generate CFI and experience self-compassion during the task, including type of CFI exercise and, second, to establish whether CFI outcomes increase with practice.

Method: In Study 1, 53 participants with a diagnosis of PD completed measures of self-compassion, self-reassurance, shame, self-criticism, fear of self-compassion, affect, anxious and avoidant attachment, and mental imagery abilities. Participants were assigned to trial CFI from memory (n = 25) or from imagination (n = 28), then rated their image's vividness, its compassionate traits, and ease of experiencing compassion. A negative mood manipulation was carried out, and CFI tasks and outcome measures were repeated. For Study 2, self-compassion and self-criticism were measured before and after 1 week of daily CFI practice.

Results: Study 1 found that negative mood and low mental imagery ability are significant inhibitors to generating compassionate images and affect. The 2 CFI exercises were equally effective. Study 2 suffered from high attrition, but regular practice was associated with significant improvement in self-compassion (though not self-criticism).

Conclusions: CFI appears to be effective in improving self-compassion for some clients. However, it is less effective in the presence of negative affect. Clients with low mental imagery ability may benefit more from alternative CFT techniques.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/cpp.2161DOI Listing

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