AI Article Synopsis

  • The study compared two types of group therapy: dynamic relational group therapy (DRT) and group psychodynamic supportive therapy (PST) to see which one helps perfectionists better.
  • 80 people with high perfectionism were divided into two groups to undergo 12 therapy sessions and their attitudes were measured before, during, after, and six months later.
  • Results showed that both therapies helped reduce negative thoughts and self-criticism, but DRT was better at improving self-reassurance and reducing dysfunctional attitudes.

Article Abstract

This randomized controlled trial investigated the efficacy of dynamic relational group therapy (DRT) relative to group psychodynamic supportive therapy (PST) in improving perfectionism-related attitudes and components of the perfectionistic self-relationship. Based on a comprehensive conceptualization of perfectionism, 80 community-recruited, highly perfectionistic individuals were randomly allocated to 12 sessions of group DRT (= 41; 5 groups) or group PST ( = 39; 5 groups). Patients completed measures of dysfunctional attitudes, self-criticism, self-esteem, and self-reassurance at pre-, mid-, and post-treatment, and six months post-treatment. Multigroup latent growth curve modeling revealed significant ( < .05) decreases in dysfunctional attitudes, concern over mistakes, two types of self-criticism, and self-esteem problems, along with a significant increase in self-reassurance, from pre-treatment to six-month follow-up in both DRT and PST. Moderate-to-large between-group differences favoring DRT over PST were found for dysfunctional attitudes and self-reassurance. A majority of patients in both conditions maintained reliable improvement at six-month follow-up in dysfunctional attitudes, concern over mistakes, and self-criticism focused on inadequacy. Findings provide evidence for the use of psychodynamic group therapy approaches in treating perfectionism-related attitudes and self-relational elements of perfectionism, and support the relative efficacy of DRT for dysfunctional attitudes and self-reassurance.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10503307.2024.2308141DOI Listing

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