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Brief Psychodynamic Psychotherapy

An adaptation of psychoanalysis in short format (10-30 sessions), focused on a central conflict, actively using transference and interpretation to produce rapid, targeted change.

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Brief Psychodynamic Psychotherapy

Presentation

Brief Psychodynamic Psychotherapy (BPP) designates a set of therapeutic models derived from psychoanalysis but condensed into a time-limited format (10-30 sessions). Developed by various authors since the 1960s — Habib Davanloo, Peter Sifneos, James Mann, David Malan, Lester Luborsky — these models share the principle of focusing on a central unconscious conflict rather than free exploration of the unconscious.

BPP's originality lies in therapist activity: unlike the more neutral classical analyst, the BPP therapist actively confronts defenses, interprets transference quickly and maintains focus on the central problem. The time constraint is used as a therapeutic lever — the announced treatment end mobilizes separation and autonomy issues.

Main founders: Habib Davanloo, Peter Sifneos, David Malan, Lester Luborsky

Core Principles

Central focus: identification of a central unconscious conflict or 'Core Conflictual Relationship Theme' (CCRT — Luborsky).

Malan's triangle: the conflict expresses itself in three domains — therapist relationship (transference), current relationships and past relationships. The therapist constantly links these three poles.

Active defense confrontation: rapid identification and confrontation of defense mechanisms to access underlying affect.

Time limit: session count fixed from the start, mobilizing loss, grief and autonomy issues.

Main Indications

  • Reactive depression to an identifiable event
  • Complicated grief
  • Focused relational conflict
  • Anxiety disorders with identifiable unconscious conflict
  • Life crises (separation, job loss, illness)
  • Adjustment disorders

Session Overview

Treatment typically comprises 12-25 weekly 50-minute face-to-face sessions. Initial sessions assess the patient's capacity to benefit from brief work and identify the central focus. Each session is actively oriented toward the focus. The final phase explicitly works through separation and treatment ending.

Variations and Sub-techniques

  • STAPP (Sifneos)
  • ISTDP (Davanloo)
  • Time-Limited Psychotherapy (Mann)
  • Supportive-Expressive Therapy (Luborsky)
  • Brief Relational Therapy (Safran and Muran)

Contraindications

  • Severe personality disorders
  • Active psychosis
  • Chronic suicidality
  • Severe active addiction
  • Inability to tolerate confrontation-generated anxiety

Medical Disclaimer

The information presented in this article is provided for educational and informational purposes only. It does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment prescription. If in doubt, always consult your physician or a qualified healthcare professional. The techniques described do not replace conventional medical treatment.

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