Derner Institute Associate Dean J. Christopher Muran, Ph.D., is at the forefront of psychotherapy research.
by Rebecca Endres and Bonnie Eissner
Why do patients drop out of psychotherapy or fail to improve? What causes ruptures in the therapeutic relationship? How can these be addressed and resolved?
J. Christopher Muran, Ph.D., associate dean of and the recently elected general vice president of the International Society for Psychotherapy Research, has been tackling these issues since 1990, when he became the director of the . And this fall, the extensive video collection from his researchtaped psychotherapy sessions from roughly 1,000 cases over two decadeswill come to Adelphi, to be archived and studied by psychology doctoral students.
Our videotape sessions are precious; theyre not easy to come by, Dr. Muran said.
The tapes are the raw data of a comprehensive, precedent-setting study of the therapeutic process. The concept is to examinevia videotaped sessions and various measurestime-limited psychotherapy in action and how it affects patient outcomes. As the research program director, Dr. Muran has honed in on rupturesrelational difficulties or impassesbetween therapists and their patients, in an effort to understand what causes them and how to resolve them.
Our thinking is that the ruptures reflect something about the patients history, presentation and personality, Dr. Muran said. But it also reflects something about the therapist as well.
Dr. Muran offered an example: Oftentimes a therapist can be oblivious to the patients distress because of their own anxiety. Its fascinating when you look at the research to see how often therapists miss cues from patients. He described how anxiety can diminish a therapists empathy and literally become contagious.
To address this issue and related ones, Dr. Muran and his colleagues have devised innovative training techniques, including role playing and mindfulness meditation, which improve therapists metacognitive capacities. All of the training is conducted in a group format.
I like to think its pretty innovative, Dr. Muran said. Typical approaches to training have been more didactic吏ur angle is not to tell you youre anxious but to help you discover your anxiety. He added: Mindfulness is something being practiced all over now; at the time [when we started] we were the only ones doing it to train therapists.
In their book, (The Guilford Press, 2000), Dr. Muran and his coauthor Jeremy Safran, describe various principles and models of intervention and training from their study of the therapeutic relationship. This book在elongs in the library of every mental health professional who practices or teaches psychotherapy, wrote a reviewer in. Dr. Muran and Dr. Safran continue to collaborate and refine their thinking.
I think the consensus continues to grow that so much comes down to the therapeutic relationship and the therapists ability to negotiate that relationship, Dr. Muran said. People recognize how important it is and, as much as there is written about it, there are still so many questions to answer.
For further information, please contact:
Todd Wilson
Strategic Communications Director泭
p 516.237.8634
e twilson@adelphi.edu