1992
DOI: 10.1080/10503309212331333568
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How Therapy is Conducted in the Private Consulting Room: A Multidimensional Description of Brief Psychodynamic Treatments

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Cited by 54 publications
(56 citation statements)
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“…Jones (1998, 2002) showed that adherence to theory-specific models of ideal therapy process in unmanualized or manualized therapies can be assessed using prototype methodology. Archived brief psychodynamic (PDT), CBT, and IPT therapies were assessed using a pantheoretical and multidimensional psychotherapy process measure (The Psychotherapy Process Q-set [PQS]; Ablon & Jones, 1999;Jones, Parke, & Pulos, 1992;Jones & Pulos, 1993). Experts on each type of therapy independently used the PQS to rate a hypothetical "ideal psychotherapy session" according to their therapy orientation.…”
Section: Studying the Relationship Between Adherence And Outcome In Gmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Jones (1998, 2002) showed that adherence to theory-specific models of ideal therapy process in unmanualized or manualized therapies can be assessed using prototype methodology. Archived brief psychodynamic (PDT), CBT, and IPT therapies were assessed using a pantheoretical and multidimensional psychotherapy process measure (The Psychotherapy Process Q-set [PQS]; Ablon & Jones, 1999;Jones, Parke, & Pulos, 1992;Jones & Pulos, 1993). Experts on each type of therapy independently used the PQS to rate a hypothetical "ideal psychotherapy session" according to their therapy orientation.…”
Section: Studying the Relationship Between Adherence And Outcome In Gmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The authors argued that treatment research should "move beyond simple pre-post designs and toward more sophisticated growth curve analyses that generate trajectories of change in individual and by group" (p. 945). Similarly, methodological conclusions from a study of psychodynamic therapy by Jones, Pare, and Pulos (1992) have also highlighted "the importance of obtaining . .…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Q-sets describing a topic of interest and constituting the data collection tool in Q-methodology have also been used to describe and measure professional processes (e.g., the psychotherapy process Q-set [PQS], Jones & Pulos, 1993). The PQS has proven to be a useful tool for identifying objective differences in the psychotherapy process (e.g., Ablon & Jones, 1999;Jones, Parke, & Pulos, 1992;Jones & Pulos, 1993). For example, the PQS has been used to create theoretical prototypes of a range of standard treatment interventions (e.g., Pole, Ablon, & O'Connor, 2008).…”
Section: Rationale For Selection Of Q-methodologymentioning
confidence: 99%