Jon T. Monsen
University of Oslo
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Featured researches published by Jon T. Monsen.
Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics | 2002
Anne Grete Hersoug; Jon T. Monsen; Odd E. Havik; Per Høglend
Background: The aim of the study was the prediction of the quality of early working alliance, using possible predictors among patient pretreatment variables: diagnoses, current and past relationships and intrapsychic ones. Data arefrom the ongoing, naturalistic Norwegian Multisite Project on Process and Outcome of Psychotherapy (NMSPOP). Methods: The sample, n = 270, is recruited from 15 outpatient clinics; 61.1% of the patients have personality disorders. Alliance was assessed with the Working Alliance Inventory (WAI), and predictors include independent clinicians’ evaluations of diagnostic/interpersonal/intrapsychic characteristics and the patients’ self-reports on similar and additional variables. Results: Four of 6 hypotheses were supported: Quality of working alliance is difficult to predict, early alliance is better predicted than later, diagnostic variables do not predict quality of working alliance, but quality of both current and past relationships is associated with working alliance. In a hierarchical multiple-regression analysis, 7% variance of working alliance in the 3rd session was explained from current relationship variables, whereas alliance in the 12th session was not predicted by the same model. Intrapsychic variables predicted the therapists’ ratings of alliance, but not the patients’ ratings. Conclusion: The results are in line with previous research, and also with the theoretical model for working alliance.
Psychotherapy Research | 1995
Jon T. Monsen; Thorleiv Odland; Anne Faugli; Elisabeth Daae; Dag E. Eilertsen
Twenty-five patients participated in a prospective follow-up study at an outpatient psychotherapy unit specializing in treating patients with personality disorders and psychosis. The therapeutic approach was broadly based on object relations theory and psychodynamic self-psychology, and was focused in particular on affect consciousness, parental images, self-image and interpersonal relations. Mean duration of treatment was 25.4 months, and the mean follow-up period was 5.2 years. At termination of therapy, a statistically significant and substantial change was found in affect consciousness, characterological defenses, and symptoms. Moreover, 75% of the persons who had earlier fulfilled the DSM-III criteria for an axis I diagnosis no longer fulfilled these criteria. The reduction in axis II diagnoses was 72%. The patients who stayed in therapy for at least one year showed a change in rank ordering on the scales measuring affect consciousness and severity of personality disorder. At follow-up these patterns...
Psychological Assessment | 2006
Jon T. Monsen; Knut A. Hagtvet; Odd E. Havik; Dag E. Eilertsen
This study assessed the construct validity of the circumplex model of the Inventory of Interpersonal Problems (IIP-C) in Norwegian clinical and nonclinical samples. Structure was examined by evaluating the fit of the circumplex model to data obtained by the IIP-C. Observer-rated personality disorder criteria (DSM-IV, Axis II) were used as external correlates. The reliability of the IIP-C scales was acceptable and in the same range as in the original version. A multisample analysis strategy did not support an invariant circumplex model across the 2 groups. However, the estimated structures reflected mostly the same circular pattern of a quasi-circumplex model in the 2 groups. Departures from the ideal model were of negligible practical significance. The validity results examining personality disorder correlates of the IIP-C generally conformed to predictions, providing direct evidence for agreement between self-report and expert judgments of interpersonal problems.
Psychotherapy Research | 2008
Anna Louise von der Lippe; Jon T. Monsen; Michael Helge R⊘nnestad; Dag Erik Eilertsen
Abstract Client–therapist interactions were studied in 14 positive-change (PC) and 14 negative-change or nonchange (NC) therapies with the same therapists and similar clients. Aggregated structural analysis of social behavior (SASB) scores showed increasingly dissimilar interaction styles between client and therapist in NC therapies. First-lag transition analyses of SASB codings of Sessions 3, 12, and 20 showed the following differences: Stable hostile complementarity characterized NC within and across sessions. Hostile complementarity was nevertheless relatively rare. Therapists met clients’ invitations to hostile responses most frequently in nonhostile ways, yet they initiated more belittling and ignoring interactions with NC clients, pointing to the subtly hostile therapeutic climate created. Rejection of therapists’ interventions predicted negative outcome most strongly and escalated with time. Clients’ skepticism may make therapists vulnerable to feelings of inadequacy and, if not dealt with therapeutically, may easily release the therapists’ own hostility.
European Psychiatry | 2009
Espen Kristian Arnevik; Theresa Wilberg; Øyvind Urnes; Merete Selsbakk Johansen; Jon T. Monsen; Sigmund Karterud
This article describes the results of an eight-month follow-up investigation from a randomized controlled trial of day hospital psychotherapy (DHP) compared with outpatient individual psychotherapy (OIP) for patients with personality disorders (N=114). The patients were randomly assigned to either 18 weeks of day hospital treatment followed by long-term conjoint group and individual therapy (DHP), or outpatient individual psychotherapy (OIP). The main outcome measures were attrition rate, suicide attempts, suicidal thoughts, self-injury, psychosocial functioning, symptom distress, and interpersonal and personality problems. The study showed a low dropout rate and a moderate improvement on a broad range of clinical measures for both treatments. However, there was no indication of the superiority of one treatment over the other. Neither was there any indication that day hospital treatment was better for the most poorly functioning patients. Further studies will follow this group of patients for the next few years, the results of which may have implications for resource allocation and the organization of mental health services for patients with personality disorders.
Psychotherapy Research | 2009
Anne Grete Hersoug; Per H⊘glend; Odd E. Havik; Anna Louise von der Lippe; Jon T. Monsen
Abstract This study explored pretreatment patient characteristics associated with the level and growth of working alliance in therapies lasting up to 120 therapy sessions. The quality of working alliance was rated by both patients (N=201) and therapists (N=61) at Sessions 3, 12, and 20 and then at every 20th successive session. Patients reported that experience with good maternal care up to adolescence and better current interpersonal relationships were associated with positive ratings of working alliance throughout therapy. Higher global functioning was associated with growth of alliance over time. Higher levels of interpersonal problems of the cold/detached kind were associated with poorer early working alliance. On the other hand, this type of interpersonal problems was also associated with improvement of working alliance over time. Therapists’ ratings of alliance were associated with patients’ intrapsychic functioning. Implications for treatment and research are discussed.
Psychotherapy Research | 2011
Ole André Solbakken; Roger Sandvik Hansen; Jon T. Monsen
Abstract The importance of affect regulation, modulation or integration for higher-order reflection and adequate functioning is increasingly emphasized across different therapeutic approaches and theories of change. These processes are probably central to any psychotherapeutic endeavor, whether explicitly conceptualized or not, and in recent years a number of therapeutic approaches have been developed that explicitly target them as a primary area of change. However, there still is important lack of clarity in the field regarding the understanding and operationalization of affect integration, particularly when it comes to specifying underlying mechanisms, the significance of different affect states, and the establishment of operational criteria for measurement. The conceptual relationship between affect integration and reflective function thus remains ambiguous. The present article addresses these topics, indicating ways in which a more complex and exhaustive understanding of integration of affect, cognition and behavior can be attained.
Journal of Personality Assessment | 2011
Ole André Solbakken; Roger Sandvik Hansen; Odd E. Havik; Jon T. Monsen
Affect integration, or the capacity to utilize the motivational and signal properties of affect for personal adjustment, is assumed to be an important aspect of psychological health and functioning. Affect integration has been operationalized through the affect consciousness (AC) construct as degrees of awareness, tolerance, nonverbal expression, and conceptual expression of nine discrete affects. A semistructured Affect Consciousness Interview (ACI) and separate Affect Consciousness Scales (ACSs) have been developed to specifically assess these aspects of affect integration. This study explored the construct validity of AC in a Norwegian clinical sample including estimates of reliability and assessment of structure by factor analyses. External validity issues were addressed by examining the relationships between scores on the ACSs and self-rated symptom- and interpersonal problem measures as well as independent, observer-based ratings of personality disorder criteria and the Global Assessment of Functioning (GAF) scale from the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (4th ed. [DSM–IV]; American Psychiatric Association, 1994).
Journal of Personality Disorders | 2010
Espen Kristian Arnevik; Theresa Wilberg; Øyvind Urnes; Merete Selsbakk Johansen; Jon T. Monsen; Sigmund Karterud
The Ullevål Personality Project is a randomized controlled trial (N = 114) initiated as a response to the limited evidence justifying provision of day hospital treatment for patients with personality disorders (PDs). A step-down model (CP) consisting of initial short-term day hospital treatment followed by conjoint group and individual outpatient treatment was compared with outpatient individual psychotherapy (OIP). The patients were evaluated at baseline, 8 months, and 18 months on a wide range of clinical measures assessing symptoms, interpersonal problems, psychosocial functioning, and personality pathology. This study indicates that eclectic psychotherapy provided by private practitioners has at least as good an effect upon personality-disordered patients as a more comprehensive day hospital and outpatient follow-up treatment. However, this study has to be supplemented with a cost-benefit analysis before any consideration of implications for health care planning.
Journal of Personality Assessment | 2007
Jon T. Monsen; Anna Louise von der Lippe; Odd E. Havik; Margrethe Seeger Halvorsen; Dag E. Eilertsen
In this study, we examined the reliability and construct validity of the Structural Analysis of Social Behavior Introject Surface, Intrex long form A (SASB-IS; Benjamin, 1995) in 2 Norwegian samples. The fit of the 8 SASB-IS scales to the structural requirements of a circumplex model with relaxed equal spacing constraints was reasonably good in an outpatient sample, but poor in a normal reference sample. The deviations from the equal spacing based on an ideal circumplex model, however, seem to have minimal implications for the utility of the instrument in clinical assessment. The reliability of the SASB-IS was acceptable on most scales, but two scales had unacceptable low reliability. Correspondence with external criteria supported the validity of the SASB-IS in both samples. Profile patterns related to different segments of the introject circumplex model were systematically related to severity of psychopathology: Hostile and accepting patterns of self-relatedness formed polar opposites; control patterns and intermediate patterns gave intermediate pathology scores.