BackgroundClinicians claim that partners in a couple can be understood to share a mode of relating, at an unconscious level. Assessment of this depends on inference from observable data. This study tests the viability and reliability of a modification of the Personal Relatedness Profile (PRP) for this purpose.AimsTo test the interrater reliability and construct validity of a joint PRP score for couples.MethodSeven therapists independently rated couples' interactions using the 30-item PRP and segments of videotaped interviews with 19 couples.ResultsInterrater reliability was good and correlations between items clearly supported the underlying Kleinian bipolar model used (paranoid–schizoid/depressive positions).ConclusionsPsychoanalytic couple psychotherapists agree in independent judgements of the nature of couple functioning, these judgements being based on envisaging couples in terms of an unconsciously shared state of mind.
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