PSYCHODYNAMIC AND ATTACHMENT PSYCHODYNAMIC AND ATTACHMENT

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Psychodynamic and attachment   Psychodynamic and attachment perspectives on depression perspectives on depression

Jeremy holmes Jeremy holmes University of Exeter UK

What does neuroimaging tell us about  depression? (Carhart‐Harris et al) • ‘Hypofrontality’ Hypofrontality  esp esp DLPFC • Increased activity in Cg25 (subgenual cingulate).  Cg25 as  a ‘dam’ holding back  i l ) C 25 ‘d ’ h ldi b k impulses from the PFC • Deep stimulation of Cg25 alleviates  depression

Implications • Default Mode Network = turning away from  ( j the world/attachments ( decreased Object  Cathexis)    • Activation of DMN – Activation of DMN ‘damming damming up up’ leading to  leading to self‐cathexis • Deactivation of normal mediating/affect  regulatory role of PFC – intrusion of  regulatory role of PFC  intrusion of unmodulated affects/impulses

Genes & childhood adversity as  vulnerability factors • Developmental: poor‐parent child  p relationship, marital discord/divorce,  childhood bereavement, neglect, physical and  sexual abuse sexual abuse  ‐‐‐ all tend to detach from relationship  • Personality: ‘neuroticism’ (+ stress/loss);   short  serotonin transporter  alleles serotonin transporter alleles ‘short’

Situational and social vulnerability  factors • lack of close confiding relationship,  • poverty; poverty;  • housing difficulties;  • unemployment; >3 children < 15  • chronic physical illness chronic physical illness ‐‐ i.e. stress/threat + lack of secure base 

Evolutionary perspectives Evolutionary perspectives • Depression adaptive to status deflation:  p y p temporary withdrawal from competition,  conflict • Depression as a necessary retreat v Depression as a necessary retreat v the  the depressive prison • ? ‘Healthy Depression’: acknowledgement of  guilt, reconcilation of splitting:  guilt, reconcilation of splitting: • ‘where there’s depression there’s hope’

Social origins of depression Social origins of depression

‘Provoking Agents’ (Brown & Harris)

1. Severe event alone

Psychiatric patients (depression) (n = 114)

Onset cases (depression) ((n = 37))

‘Normal’ and ‘borderline’ women (n = 382)

%

%

%

30

41

13



Severe event and major difficulty

32



Major difficulty alone

14

24

11



No severe event or major j difficultyy

25

11

70

75

24

89

6

30

Depression and attachment Depression and attachment • Depression obverse of attachment (c.f.  p y ) asthma/immune response; anxiety/arousal): • With attachment goes the  possibility/inevitability of loss possibility/inevitability of loss • Depression as stress: activates attachment  behaviours, inhibits exploration (= ‘self‐ preoccupation ) preoccupation’) • Hence unrewarding clinging

Insecure attachment and depression Insecure attachment and depression • Insecure attachment: depression vulnerability  y p y as trade‐off ‐‐ misery trumps insecurity  • Hypoactivation/dismissive/avoidant:  dampening aggression means abnegation of dampening aggression means abnegation of  self‐assertion  • Hyperactivation/ambivalent: eliciting care  means abnegating autonomy means abnegating autonomy

Attachment & depression continued Attachment & depression continued • (For an infant) cessation of attachment =  death • Hence murder/suicide phantasies in affairs,  divorce unremitting stress divorce, unremitting stress • Depression as withdrawal into oneself when  external attachment figure/secure base  disappears (from ‘object‐oriented disappears (from  object oriented network network’  ON, to ‘default mode network’ DMN)

CBT: the dominant psychotherapy  paradigm • Diathesis‐stress model • Maladaptive beliefs about the self originating  Maladaptive beliefs about the self originating in childhood • Activated by resonant situations A i db i i • Selective attention and inference leads to  negative mood reactions (?DMN v ON) ( b ll (n.b. all compatible with a psychodynamic  tibl ith h d i model)

Recent developments in CBT Recent developments in CBT • Negative/maladaptive beliefs activated by  yp mood – i.e. two way traffic between  y dysphoric affect and cognition • Role of rumination & unpleasant bodily  Role of rumination & unpleasant bodily sensations (self‐preoccupation) • ‘Core modes’: loss, defeat, worthlessness,  failure, unloveability failure, unloveability • Compensatory but maintaining strategies

Psychodynamic riposte to CBT  hegemony • H Heterogeneity of depression – i fd i e.g. no + ive i evidence  id on bipolar or schizophrenia v befriending • Allegiance effects All i ff t • Continuing uncertainty about mode of action of  psychotherapy • Efficacy and effectiveness • Absence of evidence does not = evidence of absence Ab f id d t id f b • Accumulating evidence for psychodynamic • But ‐‐ is all this special pleading?

Phenomenology of Depression Phenomenology of Depression • • • • • • • •

Low self‐esteem lf Guilt Feeling sad, weepy, miserable Sense of futility and meaninglessness Sense of futility and meaninglessness Irritability and intolerance Wishing to be dead  Mental torment and anguish Mental torment and anguish Anhedonia

Meaning‐themes for psychotherapy of  depression • • • • • •

DD as covert grief Low self‐esteem Low self esteem vv healthy narcissism healthy narcissism Oedipal aspect Guilt and the damaged object Aggression and assertion Aggression and assertion In each case a) linking precipitant with  developmental issue (Axis 1 + Axis 11) b) from  DMN to ON via therapeutic relationship

Depression as covert grief Depression as covert grief • The p. locked into one or all of phases of grief:  p p denial, protest and/or despair • The hidden/past trauma‐schema that is re‐ awakened by current loss or difficulty: ‘the awakened by current loss or difficulty:  the  dreadful has already happened’

Therapeutic implications Therapeutic implications • • • •

Find & work through the unmourned loss Using ‘Malan’s Using  Malan s triangles triangles’:: T,  O,  P; A,  D, HI The impingement re‐enters the ‘arena of  p p begins to  g omnipotence’ in the transference: p gain some sense of control over what  previously was felt to be overwhelming previously was felt to be overwhelming

Cows… Cows

Case History Case History  • 45 yr old m, co‐hab 2 children, farm injury:  depression,  somatisation • No father, stigma; odd depressed mother • ‘loved loved his cows his cows’;; bereavement reaction bereavement reaction • Obsessed with insurance claim • I challenge +++: ‘sorry for self’, ‘life goes on’ etc. • Justifying to myself that I am being  Justifying to myself that I am being ‘father‐like’ father like  in  in place of his missing father

Case History continued Case History continued • EEnd of session: “So you’re saying I am a useless,  d f i “S ’ i I l worthless person” • I worry about suicide, letter to GP etc I worry about suicide letter to GP etc • Epiphany: ‘re‐traumatising’ – insurance co, me,  cow’ss  = mother cow = mother’ss milk milk • Next session: tries to hug me, (?worried his  damaging anger); “II loved damaging anger);  loved those cows and their  those cows and their milk”. • Improved relationship with his son; fighting  Improved relationship with his son; fighting insurance co

Low self‐esteem and healthy  narcissism • Conditional love/never having felt special,   di i ll / h i f l i l makes one vulnerable to depression: • Every loss = not ‘good enough’ to prevent it  • Help the p Help the p redress self redress self‐fulfilling fulfilling prophesy of  prophesy of low self‐esteem:  • i.e. ‘he really does appear to love me despite  i e ‘he really does appear to love me despite my failings’ (including the depression itself) • Modifying the harsh superego via impact of  reality

Oedipal aspect Oedipal aspect • I can never out‐do father, mother – not strong,   g clever,  attractive, thin,  enough etc • Every competition or setback feels like a  confirmation of one’ss inadequacy confirmation of one inadequacy • ‘envy never takes a holiday’ • Seeing this as a childish residue of  anachronistic feelings Helping p to value anachronistic feelings.  Helping p. to value  strengths rather than dwell on failures

Guilt and the damaged object Guilt and the damaged object • Depression as the awful and guilty realisation i h f l d il li i that one hates/attacks/envies the very object  ( (secure base) which one loves and upon which  b ) hi h l d hi h one depends • Therefore the attack turned inwards in order to  protect the object and retain a degree of security  f from it i • Approach/avoidance dilemma • Learn in the transference that the object survives  y p f and continues to love you in spite of the attacks

Depression aggression & assertion Depression, aggression & assertion • Inhibition of assertiveness as attachment  gy y g strategy with mildly rebuffing attachment  figure • Enhancement of helplessness and use of  Enhancement of helplessness and use of ‘down‐power’ in inconsistent parenting • Enactment of abuse or abandonment in self‐ attack • Encourage ‘healthy protest’ and assertiveness

Therapy as instillation of hope Therapy as instillation of hope

NIMH study: % recovering and remaining  well • • • •

30%(14/46) in CBT group 26% (14/53) in IPT group 26% (14/53) in IPT group 19% (9/48) Imiprimine plus CM 20% (10/51) placebo plus CM

• No grounds for complacency

RECOVERY/IMPROVEMENT BY BEFRIENDING AND EXPERIENCE OF FRESH START/DIFFICULTY REDUCTION

% Recovering

(FS/DR) 100 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0

81

78

45 20

Befriended Befriended with w/o FS/DR FS/DR

Controls with FS/DR

Controls w/o FS/DR

Attachment theory:  mechanism of  action for therapy… • Secure base of therapy/therapist +  ( (‘befriending’) g) • ‘Exploration’ • P acquires an inner ‘third’ with which  P i i ‘ hi d’ i h hi h • challenge DMN with ON (‘fresh start’) g ( ) • i.e. to mentalise

Non psychoanalytic adjuvants Non‐psychoanalytic adjuvants • The benign therapist: does not ignore,  blame  h b i h i d i bl or condone • Activity‐scheduling as a framework for  g p containing the pain • Social rhythm therapy in bipolar disorder • Distancing the pain from the self – the pain from the self visualisation techniques, mindfulness  exercises i • Antidepressants as psychic analgesia

Therapeutic implications integrative Therapeutic implications ‐‐ • Explicit focus on overcoming humiliation,  li i f i h ili i entrapment and loss • Reduce self‐blame by emphasis on contextual  g p physical and emotional  p y origins of depression – circumstances • Building up supportive relationships and  Building up supportive relationships and networks, a) directly: marital and family  therapy b) indirectly: role play and therapy b) indirectly: role play and  reinforcement

Lear on depression Lear on depression ‘‘…the point of the anti‐depressant is not simply  h i f h id i i l to relieve the pain and lift the depression; it is  to help put the p. back in the position where  she can again take up the task of developing  herself as a subject…there is no drug, now or  ever, that can perform that task’ ‘even if the meanings did not fundamentally  cause the depression, the depression will be cause the depression, the depression will be  causing meanings…’

Lear continued Lear continued • ‘‘…psychoanalysis forgot that it was  science of the  h l i f h i i f h subject, and advertised itself as a medical cure  f for a specific disease…’ ifi di ’ • ..we can learn much about the brain that is of  value in alleviating human suffering…but none of  this can answer the subjective question: what is it  f for me to become a person?...Psychoanalysis is a  b ? P h l i i process by which I come to take responsibility for  hith t hitherto unconscious aspects of myself.  I thereby  i t f lf I th b deepen myself as a subject.’

New beginnings New beginnings

Conclusions • Are we on thin ice here? • Might NICE say – g y by all means ‘become a person’,  y p , but don’t expect the taxpayer to fund you? • Neuropsychoanalysis as capitulation or new  as capitulation or new beginning? • Is there an irreducible radical edge to psa which is  the fundamental value, but also the hazard,   of  trying to practice psychiatry psychodynamically ?

What do you think? What do you think? • Answers/slide requests to • [email protected]