Clinician emotional responses and therapeutic alliance when treating adolescent patients with narcissistic personality disorder subtypes: a clinically meaningful empirical investigation

Abstract

This study examined clinician emotional responses and therapeutic alliance in psychotherapy with adolescent patients with specific subtypes of narcissistic personality disorder (NPD). A national sample of therapists (N = 58) completed the Therapist Response Questionnaire for Adolescents to identify patterns of clinician response, the Working Alliance Inventory to evaluate the quality of alliance, and the Shedler-Westen Assessment Procedure-II for Adolescents to assess the personality pathology of a patient in their care. The results showed that the grandiose narcissistic subtype was positively related to angry/criticized and disengaged/hopeless therapist responses and negatively related to warm/attuned response. The fragile subtype was positively related to overinvolved/worried therapist response. The high-functioning/exhibitionistic subtype was negatively related to angry/criticized response. Lower levels of therapeutic alliance were positively associated with the grandiose subtype. Moreover, the empirically founded prototypes of therapist responses to adolescent patients with NPD subtypes strongly resembles theoretical-clinical accounts. The clinical implications were addressed

    Similar works