2015
DOI: 10.14417/ap.938
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Colaboração terapêutica: Estudo comparativo de um caso finalizado e de um caso de desistência

Abstract: A qualidade da interação terapêutica constitui-se como um importante preditor dos resultados terapêuticos e como crucial na decisão dos clientes para se manterem na terapia. O presente estudo teve como objetivo descrever e comparar o desenvolvimento da colaboração terapêutica em dois casos clínicos, um finalizado e um de desistência, ambos de insucesso e seguidos em Terapia Narrativa. Foi utilizado o Sistema de Codificação da Colaboração Terapêutica, que permite distinguir episódios colaborativos, não colabora… Show more

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Cited by 10 publications
(10 citation statements)
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“…Although the clients might have wished to decrease their experience of suffering and might have wanted to change with the help of the therapist, it is possible that they were blocked in the process of collaboration if they were anticipating change as having undesirable implications in their self-meanings or narrative structure. This would be consistent with studies that focused on impasses and blocks of change (Feixas et al, 2013;Ferreira et al, 2015;Gabalda & Stiles, 2009;Ribeiro et al, 2014Ribeiro et al, , 2016aRibeiro et al, , 2016bStiles, Gabalda, & Ribeiro, 2016), which suggest that self-conflicts regarding the experience of change may be involved in an increasing non-collaborative interaction and, subsequently, in dropout cases of therapy.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 86%
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“…Although the clients might have wished to decrease their experience of suffering and might have wanted to change with the help of the therapist, it is possible that they were blocked in the process of collaboration if they were anticipating change as having undesirable implications in their self-meanings or narrative structure. This would be consistent with studies that focused on impasses and blocks of change (Feixas et al, 2013;Ferreira et al, 2015;Gabalda & Stiles, 2009;Ribeiro et al, 2014Ribeiro et al, , 2016aRibeiro et al, , 2016bStiles, Gabalda, & Ribeiro, 2016), which suggest that self-conflicts regarding the experience of change may be involved in an increasing non-collaborative interaction and, subsequently, in dropout cases of therapy.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 86%
“…Considering all the cases that the therapist was responsible for, including the cases selected for this study, the therapist attended a total of 34 cases of narrative therapy, from which 26.47% were successful completers, 38.26% were unsuccessful completers, 5.88% were successful dropouts, and 29.41% were unsuccessful dropouts. Despite the different outcomes, previous case studies using the TCCS (e.g., Ferreira, Pinto, Ribeiro, Pereira, & Pinheiro, 2015;Ribeiro et al, 2014Ribeiro et al, , 2016a consistently demonstrate that this therapist tended to intervene according to challenging strategies since the beginning of the therapy.…”
Section: Methods Participantsmentioning
confidence: 85%
“…A number of studies using the TCM (E. Ribeiro et al, 2013) have supported the conceptualization of therapeutic responsiveness based on clients' TZPD. These studies were based on the theory-building research strategy (Stiles, 2007(Stiles, , 2009(Stiles, , 2010 and aimed to describe the therapeutic interaction with reference to clients' TZPD (i.e., therapeutic collaboration) throughout the therapy process, describing patterns of therapeutic exchanges that differentiate good and poor outcome cases with different types of termination (completers versus dropouts) and of a diversity of therapy approaches, including narrative therapy (Cardoso et al, 2020;Ferreira et al, 2015;A. P. Ribeiro et al, 2014A.…”
Section: Research On Tcm and Responsiveness In Ntmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Based on detailed and idiographic clinical observations, these case studies have helped us to highlight how therapists appropriately adjusted (or not) their interventions to clients' responses on a moment-to moment basis throughout the therapy processes. A general contribution of a comparative case study in narrative therapy (Ferreira et al, 2015) supporting the TCM is that, compared with a poor outcome, the therapist of a good outcome case (both completer cases) seems to have been appropriately responsive to clients by adjusting the therapist's interventions to the client's previous immediate responses and being able to maintain or quickly return to work within the client's TZPD. In contrast, in narrative poor outcome dropouts, we have found a pattern of therapist's insistence on interventions that exceeded clients' TZPD, and this behavior increased in predropout sessions (e.g., A. P. Pinto et al, 2018).…”
Section: Research On Tcm and Responsiveness In Ntmentioning
confidence: 99%
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