All Stories

  1. Psychometric analysis of the Swedish panic disorder severity scale and its self-report version
  2. Influence of personal therapy on learning and development of psychotherapeutic skills
  3. Another way to think about psychological change: experiential vs. incremental
  4. Rating the outcomes of psychotherapy or psychoanalysis using the Change After Psychotherapy (CHAP) scales. Manual and commentary
  5. Change After Psychotherapy (CHAP): un metodo di valutazione del cambiamento alla fine della psicoterapia
  6. The POSE study - panic control treatment versus panic-focused psychodynamic psychotherapy under randomized and self-selection conditions: study protocol for a randomized controlled trial
  7. Maintaining everyday life in a family with a dying parent: Teenagers' experiences of adapting to responsibility
  8. Secure attachment to therapist, alliance, and outcome in psychoanalytic psychotherapy with young adults.
  9. On the Value of Double Vision
  10. Dropout revisited: Patient- and therapist-initiated discontinuation of psychotherapy as a function of organizational instability
  11. Reflective functioning, affect consciousness, and mindfulness: Are these different functions?
  12. Heterogeneity in Responses to a Universal Prevention Program
  13. Everyday evidence: Outcomes of psychotherapies in Swedish public health services.
  14. Psychometric analysis of a measure of socio-emotional development in adolescents
  15. Über den Wert des doppelten Blicks
  16. Maternal experiences and the mother–infant dyad’s development: introducing the Interview of Mother’s Experiences (I-ME)
  17. The development of therapeutic attitudes during and after psychotherapy training
  18. A randomized controlled trial of mother-infant psychoanalytic treatment: II. Predictive and moderating influences of qualitative patient factors
  19. Credibility clusters, preferences, and helpfulness beliefs for specific forms of psychotherapy
  20. Searching for recognition: The professional development of psychodynamic psychotherapists during training and the first few years after it
  21. A randomized controlled trial of mother-infant psychoanalytic treatment: I. Outcomes on self-report questionnaires and external ratings
  22. Therapeutic attitudes and practice patterns among psychotherapy trainees in Germany
  23. Prevention of substance use among adolescents through social and emotional training in school: A latent-class analysis of a five-year intervention in Sweden
  24. The role of learning style in choosing one's therapeutic orientation
  25. A Letter to My Friend and Researcher Colleague, Professor Sy Entist
  26. FROM PSYCHOANALYTIC NARRATIVE TO EMPIRICAL SINGLE CASE RESEARCH. IMPLICATIONS FOR PSYCHOANALYTIC PRACTICE
  27. Affect-focused body psychotherapy in patients with generalized anxiety disorder: Evaluation of an integrative method.
  28. Die Therapeutenvariable
  29. Patients’ experiences of change in cognitive–behavioral therapy and psychodynamic therapy: a qualitative comparative study
  30. Subjective health and ill health-related behaviour
  31. How do experiences of psychiatric care affect the perceived credibility of different forms of psychotherapy?
  32. Therapist attitudes and patient outcomes: II. Therapist attitudes influence change during treatment
  33. Therapist attitudes and patient outcomes. III. A latent class analysis of therapists
  34. Therapists’ therapies: The relation between training therapy and patient change in long-term psychotherapy and psychoanalysis
  35. Do psychoanalytic treatments have positive effects on health and health care utilization? Further findings of the Stockholm Uutcome of Psychotherapy and Psychoanalysis Project (STOPPP)
  36. XI. STRUCTURAL CHANGE AND ITS ASSESSMENT. EXPERIENCES FROM THE STOCKHOLM OUTCOME OF PSYCHOANALYSIS AND PSYCHOTHERAPY PROJECT
  37. The credibility of psychodynamic, cognitive and cognitive-behavioural psychotherapy in a randomly selected sample of the general public
  38. TIME MATTERS: On Temporal Interactions in Long-term follow-up of Long-term Psychotherapies
  39. Une perspective dans la durée. Résultats à long terme des psychanalyses et des psychothérapies de longue durée
  40. Can Psychoanalysis Become Empirically Supported?
  41. ‘Varieties of long‐term outcome among patients in psychoanalysis and long‐term psychotherapy: A review of findings in the Stockholm Outcome of Psychoanalysis and Psychotherapy Project (STOPPP)’ by Rolf Sandell et al.
  42. 'VARIETIES OF LONG-TERM OUTCOME AMONG PATIENTS IN PSYCHOANALYSIS AND LONG-TERM PSYCHOTHERAPY: A REVIEW OF FINDINGS IN THE STOCKHOLM OUTCOME OF PSYCHOANALYSIS AND PSYCHOTHERAPY PROJECT (STOPPP)' BY ROLF SANDELL ET AL.
  43. Can Psychoanalysis Become Empirically Supported?
  44. VARIETIES OF LONG-TERM OUTCOME AMONG PATIENTS IN PSYCHOANALYSIS AND LONG-TERM PSYCHOTHERAPY: A REVIEW OF FINDINGS IN THE STOCKHOLM OUTCOME OF PSYCHOANALYSIS AND PSYCHOTHERAPY PROJECT (STOPPP)
  45. Wie die Zeit vergeht
  46. Wiederholte Langzeitkatamnesen von Langzeit- Psychotherapien und Psychoanalysen
  47. Heaviness of abuse, drug preferences, and personality organization among drug abusers in Sweden
  48. The factor structure of Antonovsky's sense of coherence scale in swedish clinical and nonclinical samples
  49. EN UMULIG PROFESJON? OM OPPLÆRING I INTENSIV DYNAMISK PSYKOTERAPI
  50. Psychotherapeutic change is predictable, spontaneous change is not
  51. Prioritizing among patients seeking subsidized psychotherapy
  52. When Reality Doesn't Fit the Blueprint: Doing Research on Psychoanalysis and Long-Term Psychotherapy in a Public Health Service Program
  53. Levels of personality organization and psychopathology among drug abusers in Sweden
  54. Treatment utilization and personality organization among drug abusers in Sweden
  55. Does a Material Incentive Affect Response on a Psychotherapy Follow-up Questionnaire?
  56. The dentist's attitudes and their interaction with patient involvement in oral hygiene compliance
  57. The role of patient involvement in oral hygiene compliance
  58. Turing's game and the clinical significance of outcome with borderline patients at a day hospital
  59. Linguistic style as an indicator of psychotherapeutic regression: A case study
  60. Feeling like a good psychotherapist — Or a bad one: Critical incidents in psychotherapists' experiences
  61. A closer look at the ability to predict psychotherapeutic outcome
  62. Our Varying Ability to Predict the Outcomes of Psychotherapy
  63. Assessing the Effects of Psychotherapy
  64. Assessing the Effects of Psychotherapy
  65. Assessing the Effects of Psychotherapy
  66. Assessing the Effects of Psychotherapy
  67. Assessing the Effects of Psychotherapy
  68. Patient involvement in oral hygiene cooperation: a factor analytic study
  69. Influence of Supervision, Therapist’s Competence, and Patient’s Ego Level on the Effects of Time-Limited Psychotherapy
  70. DET PSYKOSOMATISKA SAMBANDET MELLAN MOR OCH BARN
  71. Possible predictors of dental patients' motivation for cooperation
  72. Scientific Information: A Review of Research
  73. Rolf Sandell, Linguistic style and persuasion. (European Monographs in Social Psychology Series). London and New York: Academic Press, 1976. Pp xiv+329.
  74. Note on choosing between competing interpretations of cross-lagged panel correlations.
  75. Effects of Attitudinal and Situational Factors on Reported Choice Behavior
  76. Substance Frequency-of-Use Scale
  77. Disagreement among judges of the accuracy of scientific information.
  78. Psychological assumptions in the study of mass communication
  79. Retrospective attitude change after reading a persuasive text.
  80. The dynamic relation between attitudes and choice behavior in the light of cross-lagged panel correlations
  81. Affect-focused body psychotherapy in patients with generalized anxiety disorder: Evaluation of an integrative method