mentalization saara salo, phd, psychologist, huch/helsinki university hospital, pilke-clinic 2014

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Mentalization Saara Salo, PhD , psychologist, HUCH/Helsinki University Hospital, Pilke-Clinic 2014

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Page 1: Mentalization Saara Salo, PhD, psychologist, HUCH/Helsinki University Hospital, Pilke-Clinic 2014

Mentalization Saara Salo, PhD

, psychologist, HUCH/Helsinki University Hospital, Pilke-Clinic

2014

Mentalization Saara Salo, PhD

, psychologist, HUCH/Helsinki University Hospital, Pilke-Clinic

2014

Page 2: Mentalization Saara Salo, PhD, psychologist, HUCH/Helsinki University Hospital, Pilke-Clinic 2014

What is mentalizing?What is mentalizing?

Mentalizing is a form of imaginative mental activity about others and onseself, namely perceiving and interpreting human behaviour in terms of intentional mental states (e.g., needs, desired, feelings, beliefs, goals, purposes, and reasons)

Bateman & Fonagy, 2012

Page 3: Mentalization Saara Salo, PhD, psychologist, HUCH/Helsinki University Hospital, Pilke-Clinic 2014

What is going on..?What is going on..?

Page 4: Mentalization Saara Salo, PhD, psychologist, HUCH/Helsinki University Hospital, Pilke-Clinic 2014
Page 5: Mentalization Saara Salo, PhD, psychologist, HUCH/Helsinki University Hospital, Pilke-Clinic 2014

Mentalization theoryMentalization theory

• Intergrates essential features of human existence and well-being

• Being ultimately socially and interpersonally rooted • How we understand ourselves and others is

determined by our past interpersonal relationships

• Is central to psychological well-being• And capability of interpersonal relations

Page 6: Mentalization Saara Salo, PhD, psychologist, HUCH/Helsinki University Hospital, Pilke-Clinic 2014

In reverseIn reverse

• Dysfuntional mentalizing leads to disorders of of self-experience

• Which is central in all forms of psychopathologies

Page 7: Mentalization Saara Salo, PhD, psychologist, HUCH/Helsinki University Hospital, Pilke-Clinic 2014
Page 8: Mentalization Saara Salo, PhD, psychologist, HUCH/Helsinki University Hospital, Pilke-Clinic 2014
Page 9: Mentalization Saara Salo, PhD, psychologist, HUCH/Helsinki University Hospital, Pilke-Clinic 2014

Mentalization based interventions

Mentalization based interventions

• Based on mentalization principles

• Main aim is to enhance the very capacity of mentalize (as opposed to social support, reducing symptoms etc.)

• Developed over the past 10--15 years

• Original focus of BPD

• Various parenting programa

Page 10: Mentalization Saara Salo, PhD, psychologist, HUCH/Helsinki University Hospital, Pilke-Clinic 2014

Essential feature in human relationships

Essential feature in human relationships

Page 11: Mentalization Saara Salo, PhD, psychologist, HUCH/Helsinki University Hospital, Pilke-Clinic 2014

Markers of mentalizationMarkers of mentalization

• Curiosity

• Awareness of the impact of affects

• Perspective taking

• Capacity to trust

• Narrative continuity

Page 12: Mentalization Saara Salo, PhD, psychologist, HUCH/Helsinki University Hospital, Pilke-Clinic 2014

Features of good mentalizingFeatures of good mentalizing

1. Is curious about own and other people’s perspectives2. Being flexible – not stuck in one point of view3. Can be playful - using humour to engage4. Can solve problems using give and take between

different people’s views5. Can differentiate one’s own experience from that of

others6. Conveys ’ownership’ of own behaviour7. Uses ’grounded’ imagination

Page 13: Mentalization Saara Salo, PhD, psychologist, HUCH/Helsinki University Hospital, Pilke-Clinic 2014

DimensionsDimensions

• Mentalization with regard to self and others• Presecnce of egocentrism• Liability of emotional contagion

• Cognitive vs affective mentalization• Thinking about feeling and feeling about

thinking

Page 14: Mentalization Saara Salo, PhD, psychologist, HUCH/Helsinki University Hospital, Pilke-Clinic 2014

Mentalizing is a developmental construct

Mentalizing is a developmental construct

• Acquisition of this capacity depends on the quality of attachment relationships

• Especially the quality of early affect mirroring

• Disruptions of early attachment and later trauma have the potential to disrupt the capacity of mentalizing

Page 15: Mentalization Saara Salo, PhD, psychologist, HUCH/Helsinki University Hospital, Pilke-Clinic 2014
Page 16: Mentalization Saara Salo, PhD, psychologist, HUCH/Helsinki University Hospital, Pilke-Clinic 2014

Transmission ModelTransmission Model

• Parental internal working models

• Parenting behaviors

• Child-parent attachment

Berlin LJ. Interventions to enhance early attachments. In Berlin L, Ziv Y, Amaya-Jackson L, Greenberg M. Enhancing early attachments. New York: Guildford Press 2005, s. 3–33.

Page 17: Mentalization Saara Salo, PhD, psychologist, HUCH/Helsinki University Hospital, Pilke-Clinic 2014

Developmental studiesDevelopmental studies

• Mind-mindedness has been linked to• Theory of Mind in 31 mo - 5 year old children

and attachment• Prospective relationship from 6 mo to 48 • Social symbolic play (desire talk) at 3 years• Executive functioning at 3 years

Meins, Fernyhough, Russell, & Clark-Carter, 1998; Meins et al., 2002; Osario et al, 2012; Bernier et al., 2012)

Page 18: Mentalization Saara Salo, PhD, psychologist, HUCH/Helsinki University Hospital, Pilke-Clinic 2014

WHEN MENTALIZATION GOES WRONG..

Page 19: Mentalization Saara Salo, PhD, psychologist, HUCH/Helsinki University Hospital, Pilke-Clinic 2014

ResearchResearch

Page 20: Mentalization Saara Salo, PhD, psychologist, HUCH/Helsinki University Hospital, Pilke-Clinic 2014
Page 21: Mentalization Saara Salo, PhD, psychologist, HUCH/Helsinki University Hospital, Pilke-Clinic 2014

Midgley & Troupp, 2013Midgley & Troupp, 2013

Page 22: Mentalization Saara Salo, PhD, psychologist, HUCH/Helsinki University Hospital, Pilke-Clinic 2014

SignificanceSignificance

• LOW mentalization leads to interpersonal difficulties• Errors in interpreting others intentions behind

overt behavior• Child’s needs? Inability to give comfort? Or

structure?

• Difficulties in handling ones own feelings – inability to cope with stress

Page 23: Mentalization Saara Salo, PhD, psychologist, HUCH/Helsinki University Hospital, Pilke-Clinic 2014

Why work with mentalization..?Why work with mentalization..?In adults, there is accumulating evidence that mentalization based therapies work with

BPDAntisocial personality disorder (Bateman & Fonagy, 2012)

In parents, appropriate parental reflective funtioning (A. Slade) predicts attachment security, adaptive social skills and increased sense of self-efficacy

Minding the Baby Adaptation for substance-abusing mothers in

residential treatment (Suchman et al., 2012)Families First / Finnish national ProgramBABY Magic / Pregnant Depressed Moms

With families (MBFT) developed at the Anna Freud Institute /London

Page 24: Mentalization Saara Salo, PhD, psychologist, HUCH/Helsinki University Hospital, Pilke-Clinic 2014

Common features in mentalizing interventions

Common features in mentalizing interventions

Simple interventionsAffect focusedFocused on patients mindsRelate to current event or activity – mental realityUse of therapist’s mind as a model – seek to mentalize the current relationshipIdentify non-mentalizing and recover from it

Page 25: Mentalization Saara Salo, PhD, psychologist, HUCH/Helsinki University Hospital, Pilke-Clinic 2014

ReferencesReferences

• Allen, J., Fonagy, P., & Bateman, A. (2008). Mentalizing in clinical practice. American psychiatric publications.

• Bateman, A., & Fonagy, P. (2012). Handbook of mentalizing in mental health practice. American Psychiatric Association.

• Fonagy, P., Gergely, G., Jurist, E., & Target, M. (2002). Affect regulation, mentalization and the development of the self. Other Press.

• George, C, Kaplan, N., & Main, M. (1985). Adult Attachment Interview. Department of Psychology, Uni- versity of California, Berkeley.

• Marvin  R, Cooper G, Hoffman K, Powell B. The Circle of Security Project: Attachment-based intervention with caregiver-preschool child dyads. Attachment and Human Development 2002; 4, 107-124.

• Midgley, N., & Troupp, C. (2013). Core features: The mentalizing loop. Dia-materiaali Mentalization Based Family Therapy Training, Helsinki.

• Midgley, N., Vrouva, I. (Eds.) (2012). Minding the Child: Mentalization-based interventions with children, young people and families. London Routledge.

• Mäkelä J., Salo S. 2011. Theraplay - vanhemman ja lapsen välinen vuorovaikutushoito lasten mielenterveysongelmissa. Duodecim 2011; 127: 327- 34.

• Stern, D. The present moment in psychotherapy and everyday life. Norton, 2004.

Page 26: Mentalization Saara Salo, PhD, psychologist, HUCH/Helsinki University Hospital, Pilke-Clinic 2014

• Thank you!

[email protected]