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Impact of attachment imagery on paranoia and mood: evidence from two single case studies

Impact of attachment imagery on paranoia and mood: evidence from two single case studies
Impact of attachment imagery on paranoia and mood: evidence from two single case studies

Cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT) for psychosis currently yields modest outcomes and must be improved. Attachment imagery may be an effective means of reducing severity of paranoid beliefs and associated affect. Experimental studies have demonstrated these effects in non-clinical groups. The impact in clinical populations remains untested.Aims: This study assessed the impact of a brief attachment imagery task on paranoia and mood, in two people with a diagnosis of schizophrenia.Method: Two single case studies are presented. Both participants were working age adults with persecutory delusions. The study utilised an A-B-A design. Participants were recruited for a 6-week period, with a 2- and 3-week baseline respectively, 1-week intervention phase, and follow-up phase matched to duration of baseline. Trait paranoia and attachment were measured at the start of the baseline. State paranoia and affect were measured daily over the 6-week period.Results: For both participants, the baseline phase was characterised by high and variable levels of paranoia, which reduced during the intervention phase, with a return to baseline scores at follow-up. We found a similar pattern for negative affect, and the reverse pattern for positive affect.Conclusions: Attachment imagery may function as an effective emotion regulation strategy for people with psychosis. Continued use is likely to be needed to maintain gains. This brief task could prove valuable to people needing skills to manage paranoia and mood, and give clinicians confidence that people can manage short-term distress in CBT for psychosis, for example when addressing past trauma.

attachment, emotion regulation, imagery, mood, paranoia, single case
1352-4658
572-583
Pitfield, Cathryn
e666dbc5-8f87-4483-83eb-9fc9b37869aa
Maguire, Tessa
f720bf11-2227-470f-b9bf-b323a59e176c
Newman-Taylor, Katherine
e090b9da-6ede-45d5-8a56-2e86c2dafef7
Pitfield, Cathryn
e666dbc5-8f87-4483-83eb-9fc9b37869aa
Maguire, Tessa
f720bf11-2227-470f-b9bf-b323a59e176c
Newman-Taylor, Katherine
e090b9da-6ede-45d5-8a56-2e86c2dafef7

Pitfield, Cathryn, Maguire, Tessa and Newman-Taylor, Katherine (2020) Impact of attachment imagery on paranoia and mood: evidence from two single case studies. Behavioural and Cognitive Psychotherapy, 48 (5), 572-583. (doi:10.1017/S1352465820000351).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT) for psychosis currently yields modest outcomes and must be improved. Attachment imagery may be an effective means of reducing severity of paranoid beliefs and associated affect. Experimental studies have demonstrated these effects in non-clinical groups. The impact in clinical populations remains untested.Aims: This study assessed the impact of a brief attachment imagery task on paranoia and mood, in two people with a diagnosis of schizophrenia.Method: Two single case studies are presented. Both participants were working age adults with persecutory delusions. The study utilised an A-B-A design. Participants were recruited for a 6-week period, with a 2- and 3-week baseline respectively, 1-week intervention phase, and follow-up phase matched to duration of baseline. Trait paranoia and attachment were measured at the start of the baseline. State paranoia and affect were measured daily over the 6-week period.Results: For both participants, the baseline phase was characterised by high and variable levels of paranoia, which reduced during the intervention phase, with a return to baseline scores at follow-up. We found a similar pattern for negative affect, and the reverse pattern for positive affect.Conclusions: Attachment imagery may function as an effective emotion regulation strategy for people with psychosis. Continued use is likely to be needed to maintain gains. This brief task could prove valuable to people needing skills to manage paranoia and mood, and give clinicians confidence that people can manage short-term distress in CBT for psychosis, for example when addressing past trauma.

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More information

e-pub ahead of print date: 29 June 2020
Published date: 1 September 2020
Additional Information: Publisher Copyright: © British Association for Behavioural and Cognitive Psychotherapies 2020.
Keywords: attachment, emotion regulation, imagery, mood, paranoia, single case

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 442317
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/442317
ISSN: 1352-4658
PURE UUID: cce33796-8c29-47d8-a04a-3883e6ab426e
ORCID for Katherine Newman-Taylor: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-1579-7959

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Date deposited: 13 Jul 2020 16:31
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 05:43

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Contributors

Author: Cathryn Pitfield
Author: Tessa Maguire

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