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Inhibitors and facilitators of compassion‐focused imagery in personality disorder
Author(s) -
Naismith Iona,
Mwale Amanda,
Feigenbaum Janet
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
clinical psychology and psychotherapy
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.315
H-Index - 76
eISSN - 1099-0879
pISSN - 1063-3995
DOI - 10.1002/cpp.2161
Subject(s) - psychology , shame , self criticism , self compassion , mood , borderline personality disorder , population , clinical psychology , personality , affect (linguistics) , compassion , psychotherapist , mindfulness , social psychology , medicine , environmental health , communication , political science , law
Background Compassion‐focused therapy (CFT) has potential to benefit clients with a personality disorder (PD), given the inflated levels of shame and self‐criticism in this population. However, clinical observation indicates that clients with PD may find techniques from this approach challenging. Aims The aim of this study is to trial one aspect of CFT, compassion‐focused imagery (CFI), with this population, and identify factors that predict clients' ability to generate CFI and experience self‐compassion during the task, including type of CFI exercise and, second, to establish whether CFI outcomes increase with practice. Method In Study 1, 53 participants with a diagnosis of PD completed measures of self‐compassion, self‐reassurance, shame, self‐criticism, fear of self‐compassion, affect, anxious and avoidant attachment, and mental imagery abilities. Participants were assigned to trial CFI from memory ( n = 25) or from imagination ( n = 28), then rated their image's vividness, its compassionate traits, and ease of experiencing compassion. A negative mood manipulation was carried out, and CFI tasks and outcome measures were repeated. For Study 2, self‐compassion and self‐criticism were measured before and after 1 week of daily CFI practice. Results Study 1 found that negative mood and low mental imagery ability are significant inhibitors to generating compassionate images and affect. The 2 CFI exercises were equally effective. Study 2 suffered from high attrition, but regular practice was associated with significant improvement in self‐compassion (though not self‐criticism). Conclusions CFI appears to be effective in improving self‐compassion for some clients. However, it is less effective in the presence of negative affect. Clients with low mental imagery ability may benefit more from alternative CFT techniques.