EUROPEAN PSYCHOTHERAPY

Scientific Journal for Psychotherapeutic Research and Practice

ISSN 2943-8659 (A peer reviewed journal)

a ONLINE journal

Publisher: EUPEHS Research Centre

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Editorial Board

Prof. Jürgen Kriz

Prof. Rainer Sachse

Scientific Council

Boothe, Brigitte, Professor, Zürich, Switzerland

Carta, Stefano, Professor, Cagliari, Italy

Cottraux, Jean, Professor, MD PhD, Lyon, France

Götestam, Gunnar, Professor, Trondheim, Norway

Grosclaude, Michèle, Dr., Strasbourg, France

Kryspin-Exner, Ilse, Professor, Vienna, Austria

Lenz,Gerhard, Professor, Vienna, Austria

Nardi, Bernardo, Professor, Ancona, Italy

Nestoros, Joannis, Professor, Heraklion, Greece

Öst, Lars-Göran, Professor, Stockholm, Sweden

Tringer, László, Professor, Budapest, Hungary

Verhofstadt-Denève, Professor, Gent, Belgium

Wells, Adrian, Professor, Manchester, Great Britain

Young, Robert, Professor, Sheffield, Great Britain

Zapkin, Professor, Moskow, Russia

______________________________________________

Volume 15  2023/2024

Special Issue: Mentalization Supporting Therapy MST

You can cost-free download the whole issue:

European Psychotherapy EP 2024 Volume 15 with 235 pages

CONTENT (click to download cost-free a pdf of the article)

Imprint  4

Editorial   Annette Richter-Benedikt & Maria Schreiner 11-14

Articles:

1 Daniel Barth: Affect Regulation and Mentalization. 11-14

2 Lars Theßen & Serge K. D. Sulz: What is mentalization supporting therapy (MST)? A metacognitive-psychotherapeutic approach based on developmental psychology. 15-35

3 Lars Theßen & Serge K. D. Sulz:  Can behavioural therapy support mentalization? For what reason? 36-69

4  Serge K. D. Sulz & Maria Schreiner:  Emotion Tracking – Healing and Growth of the Wounded   Soul. 70-89

5 Lars Theßen, Serge K. D. Sulz, Kurt Wedlich, Pia Keim, Lukas Feder, Rebecca Leiner, Paulina Schick, Katharina Wöhrle, Anna Bohn, Janina Rose & Isabelle CozziResearch on mentalization-supporting therapy MST – Attachment, mentalization, development and personality strengths. 90-135

6 Lars Theßen, Serge K. D. Sulz, S.K.D., Stephanie Birzer, Claudia Hiltrop, Lukas Feder: MST evaluation study 2 on the effectiveness of mentalization-supporting therapy. 136-157

7 Lars Theßen, Serge K. D. Sulz, Maria Patsiaoura, Lukas Feder: AACES MST evaluation study 3 on the effectiveness of mentalization-promoting behavioral therapy. 158-188

8 Annette Jasmin Richter-Benedikt & Serge K. D. Sulz: Mentalization Supporting Therapy for Adolescents MST-J – a further development of the Strategic Adolescent Therapy SJT®.  189-209

Deutsche Übersetzungen (<– Click for Translation in German Language)

aller Artikel finden Sie in deutscher Sprache in diesem zip-Archiv zum Download: BITTE KLICKEN!

These articles as literary quotations: how to quote?

1  Barth, D. (2024). Affect Regulation and Mentalization.  European Psychotherapy 2024  p. 11-14

2  Theßen, L., & Sulz, S. K. D. (2024a). Theßen, L. & Sulz, S. K. D. (2024). What is mentalization supporting therapy (MST)? A metacognitive-psychotherapeutic approach based on developmental psychology. European Psychotherapy 2024  p. 15-35

3  Theßen, L., Sulz, S.K.D. (2024b) What is mentalization supporting therapy (MST)? A metacognitive-psychotherapeutic approach based on developmental psychology. European Psychotherapy 2024 p.36-69

4  Sulz, S.K.D. & Schreiner, M. (2024). Emotion Tracking – Healing and Growth of the Wounded Soul. Psychotherapy 2024  p.70-89

5  Theßen, L., Sulz, S.K.D., Wedlich, K., Keim, P., Hofherr, L., Leiner, R., Schick, P., Wöhrle, K, Bohn, A., Rose, J. & Cozzi, I.(2024). Research on mentalization-supporting therapy MST – Attachment, mentalization, development and personality strengths. European Psychotherapy 2024  p. 90-135

6  Theßen, L., Sulz, S.K.D., Birzer, S., Hiltrop, C., Lukas Feder, L. (2024). MST evaluation study 2 on the effectiveness of mentalization-supporting therapy. European Psychotherapy 2024  p.136-157

7  Theßen, L., Sulz, S.K.D., Maria Patsiaoura, Lukas Feder (2024). AACES MST evaluation study 3 on the effectiveness of mentalization-promoting behavioral therapy. European Psychotherapy 2024  p.158-188

8  Richter-Benedikt, A. J. & Sulz, S.K.D. (2024). Mentalization Supporting Therapy for Adolescents MST-J – a further development of the Strategic Adolescent Therapy SJT®. European Psychotherapy 2024  p.189-209

Editorial of issue EP 2024 (Annette Richter-Benedikt & Maria Schreiner)

European Psychotherapy is published in the 15th year now. It arose from surveys of psychotherapy organisations of nearly all European states. The advisory board is one of the results of this cooperation. 

In the first issue in 2000 we introduced the most recent psychotherapeutic developments of that time (Dialectic Behavior Therapy DBT, Acceptance and Commitment Therapy ACT, Functional Behavior Therapy FBT). It was followed by the consistent and radical accentuation of Davanloo’s Short-term Dynamic Psychotherapy. In 2003 we dealt extensively with presenting the treatment of Posttraumatic Stress Disorder as it was developed in the work with war victims in the former Yugoslavia by Willi Butollo and coworkers. After this followed the Existential Analysis of Viktor Frankl, published by Alfried Längle, and Pesso Therapy PBSP which is on its way to become better-known in Europe only for a short time. Also not so well-known has been that since the beginnings of the 90th a third wave therapy has developed in Europe: Strategic Brief Therapy SBT which puts the work with emotions and the development of personality in the foreground. From here it is only a small step to the Emotion Focussed Therapy of Leslie Greenberg (2007) as a scientific further development of Gestalt Therapy and Client Centered Psychotherapy. 

Next we had the pleasure to introduce Jeremy Holmes as a guest publisher. He is a topclass representative of Psychoanalysis himself and he succeeded in getting contributions of real value about the presence and the future of Psychoanalysis from authors who instigate a lively development of Psychoanalysis. In his Editorial ‘towards a secure theoretical and evidential base for psychoanalytic psychotherapy’ he gives an introduction and an outline of this collection of psychoanalytic writings which are not written for psychoanalysts but for all psychotherapists who want to know more about today’s Psychoanalysis, who want to do notional steps towards it, maybe for to break with old prejudices, to become more open again for psychodynamic ideas or to ascertain similarities that are much bigger then assumed until now. We as the publishers of this periodical had to see thereby that not only communication between the schools of therapy are essential but also communication between the national groups of psychotherapists in Europe. And that exactly is our European project. 

2010-2011, psychotherapists from all over Europe reported on psychotherapy training in their country:

Gerhard Lenz, Rafael Rabenstein, Vivian Görgen Austria

Martine Bouvard  France

Serge Sulz and Stefan Hagspiel  Germany

Evrinomy Avdi Greece

Bernardo Nardi and Emidio Arimatea  Italy

Susan van Hooren Netherlands

Andrzej Kokoszka  Poland

Celia Avila Fernández Spain

Bo Erik Sigrell & Rolf Sandell Sweden and

Jan McGregor Hepburn Great Britain.

2012-2013, body psychotherapy became a topic. Concentrative Movement Therapy CMT (KBT) was used for this purpose – an evaluated Body Psychotherapy for psychosomatic and psychic disorders.

2014-2015 topic, Austria – Home of the World’s Psychotherapy – most

of the great psychotherapists in the early 20th century lived in Vienna or their career began there: Sigmund Freud, Melanie Klein, Michael Balint, Wilhelm Reich, Alfred Adler, Victor Frankl, Paul Watzlawick and Fred Kanfer.

2016-2017, Embodiment in Psychotherapy was topic (edited by Gernot Hauke) with absolutely innovative contributions – looking in the future of psychotherapy:

Wolfgang Tschacher, Mario Pfammatter: Embodiment in psychotherapy – A necessary complement to the canon of common factors? 

Marianne Eberhard-Kaechele: Emotion is motion: Improving emotion regulation through movement intervention 

Rosemarie Samaritter and Helen Payne: Being moved: Kinaesthetic reciprocities in psychotherapeutic interaction and the development of enactive intersubjectivity

Tania Pietrzak, Gernot Hauke, Christina Lohr: Connecting Couples Intervention: Improving couples’ empathy and emotional regulation using embodied empathy mechanisms. 

Andrea Behrends, Sybille Müller, Isabel Dziobek: Dancing supports empathy: The potential of interactional movement and dance for psychotherapy 

Susanne Bender: The meaning of movement rhythm in psychotherapy

Gernot Hauke, Christina Lohr, Tania Pietrzak: Moving the mind: Embodied cognition in Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) 

Lily Martin, Valerie Pohlmann, Sabine C. Koch, Thomas Fuchs: Back into life: Effects of Embodied therapies on patients with Schizophrenia.

And now 2023-2024, the latest integrative psychotherapeutic development – first published in 2021 – has not yet entered the evidence-based evaluation phase: Mentalization Supporting Therapy MST. That’s exactly what it’s about with EP: new important impulses, which of course only become evidence-based a few years after the approach was developed. Nevertheless, MST can build on a surprisingly broad empirical basis. 

We can draw on more than thirty years of research tradition on the behavioral diagnostic system, strategic brief therapy and strategic-behavioral therapy. Because MST is actually not a new therapeutic approach. Similar to Fred Kanfer’s self-management approach, it is a variant of cognitive-behavioral therapy, consisting of the evidence-based intervention strategies of behavioral therapy. However, the cognitive aspect focuses much more than Aaron T. Beck on metacognitions (thinking about thoughts, feelings and needs), so one can speak of metacognitive behavioral therapy. In addition, emotions have come to the fore. It’s about the ability to regulate emotions – to be able to control one’s emotions in such a way that they lead to stable and satisfying relationships. The third focus is needs orientation, based on John Bowlby’s attachment theory. Insecure attachment in childhood as an elementary disposition for mental and psychosomatic illnesses. And therefore the bond between patient and therapist is an indispensable condition for successful psychotherapy.

The impetus for the development of MST came from Peter Fonagy and his working group with their Mentalization Based Therapy MBT, whose perspective Daniel Barth presents in the first article. This is followed by two articles by Lars Theßen and Serge Sulz, in which they describe the theoretical background, therapeutic conception and practical approach. The special type of emotion exposure in MST (Emotion Tracking), which was adopted by Albert Pesso, is described very clearly and impressively by Serge Sulz and Maria Schreiner.

This is followed by reports on previous research in the MST research laboratory by Lars Theßen, Serge Sulz and colleagues. Finally, there is an article by Annette Richter-Benedikt in which the use of MST in young people is described. All articles are peer reviewed.

MST was only one example of innovative therapeutic development that others will follow.

Annette Richter-Benedikt & Maria Schreiner – Editors

Here you find the Editorial in your own language (translated by help oft AI (Artificial Intelligence)):

España E D I T O R I A L Psicoterapia Europea

France EDITORIAL psychothérapie européenne

Greece Ελλάδα EDITORIAL  Ε Π Ι Μ Ε Λ Ε Ι Α  ευρωπαϊκή ψυχοθεραπεία

Hungary Magyarország EDITORIAL Európai Pszichoterápia

Italia EDITORIAL Psicoterapia Europea

Norge EDITORIAL Europeisk psykoterapi

Polska E D I T O R I A L Psychoterapia Europejska

Russia Русский EDITORIAL Европейская психотерапия

Sverige E D I TO R I A L European Psychotherapy

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Write to us if you don’t succeed. Yours, Serge Sulz Prof.sulz@eupehs.org

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