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How family dementia caregivers perceive benefits of a 4-week mentalizing imagery therapy program: A pilot study

Authors :
Francis Cheng Yang
Joseph Zamaria
Stefana Morgan
Eric Lin
Andrew F. Leuchter
Michelle Abrams
Sarah E. Chang
David Mischoulon
Paola Pedrelli
Lauren Fisher
Maren Nyer
Albert Yeung
Felipe A. Jain
Source :
Professional Psychology: Research and Practice. 53:494-503
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
American Psychological Association (APA), 2022.

Abstract

Family caregivers of dementia patients experience high levels of interpersonal stress that often results in elevated anxiety, and depression, and negative impacts on interpersonal relationships. Changes in behaviors and the structure of relationships with the care recipient (CR) and others in the social milieu challenge the caregivers' ability to mentalize, or understand the links between mental states and behaviors. This study investigates the experiences and perceived benefits of family dementia caregivers who underwent Mentalizing Imagery Therapy (MIT), a treatment aiming to improve balanced self-other mentalizing and reduce psychological symptoms.Purposeful sampling was used to select 11 family dementia caregivers who underwent a 4-week pilot trial of MIT. Semi-structured interviews were completed post-intervention to identify subjective benefits, putative psychological mediators and perceived active components.Caregivers reported improvements in well-being, mood, anxiety, and sleep, and a majority stated MIT helped with forming and maintaining healthier relationships. Some participants noted benefits extending to how they reacted to their social environment and perceived themselves more objectively from others' perspectives. Specific elements of MIT, including self-compassion, self-care, and the ability to reflect on emotionally arousing challenges, might have mediated these improvements.Family dementia caregivers perceived salutary benefits of MIT on multiple domains of well-being. The self reports suggest MIT holds promise for improving well-being, reducing non-mentalizing patterns of thought, and facilitating improvements in balanced mentalization within the caregivers' relationships.

Subjects

Subjects :
General Psychology

Details

ISSN :
19391323 and 07357028
Volume :
53
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Professional Psychology: Research and Practice
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5cec6757fc0fd66cb30202439f9a76eb