While concern and narcissism seem to be contradictory in nature, clinical evidence and theoretical writings on pathological forms of concern--tracing their origin to deficiencies in early relationships with primary caretakers--suggest that the actual relationship between these two characteristics might be much more complicated. We respond to a study aimed to add empirical data to the clinical and theoretical knowledge examined the relationships between self-object functions, types of narcissism and pathological concern. The findings of the study showed that pathological concern was positively associated with self-object needs and that this association was mediated by covert narcissism. Our discussion focuses on the developmental and psychodynamic sources of pathological concern, as well as its significance in the intrapersonal and interpersonal domains.
BACKGROUND
Suicide is one of the leading causes of death worldwide, and it can be prevented by psychotherapy. Nowadays, it is crucial to identify individuals at risk of suicide in technology-based therapies, such as messaging therapy.
OBJECTIVE
The objective of the study is to examine the risk factors predicting suicide ideation during a messaging psychotherapy, and the moderating role of working alliance in the association between baselined depression and later suicide ideation.
METHODS
A large outpatient sample (n = 4,388) engaged in daily messaging with licensed clinicians from a telemedicine provider. Using a longitudinal design, depression and anxiety symptoms were assessed at baseline, using the Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-8) for depression, and the Generalized Anxiety Disorder (GAD-7) for anxiety. The Working Alliance was measured with the short-version of the Working Alliance Inventory (WAI-SR) after three weeks of therapy, and suicide ideation was assessed at baseline and after six weeks of therapy, by item 9 of the Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9). Demographic measures were also assessed.
RESULTS
Results indicate that depression, baseline suicide ideation and working alliance, especially its tasks subscale, significantly predicted suicide ideation after six weeks. Working alliance, especially the task and bond subscales, moderated the association between depression at baseline and suicide ideation after six weeks, so that experiencing higher quality of working alliance between the patient and the therapist decreased the association between depression and suicide ideation.
CONCLUSIONS
Suicide ideation may be reduced by experiencing the therapeutic relationship as beneficial, even among at-risk population, which suffer from depressive symptoms. It is the first study to show this moderation effect in any platform of therapy.
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