scholarly journals Transactional Analysis as Psychotherapy Method – A Discourse Analytic Study

Author(s):  
Roland Johnsson

Operational definitions of categorisations by McNeel (1975) were developed and applied by the author and an independent assessor to complete discourse analysis of 72 hours of transactional analysis group therapy in the style of Goulding & Goulding (1976, 1979) conducted during 1984/85. Results showed that the therapist used an average of 42% of the discourse space and that the therapy did indeed contain TA components, with the two main categories being ‘Feeling Contact’ and ‘Contracts’, and with particular use of TA techniques of ‘talking to Parent projections’, ‘make feeling statement’, ‘mutual negotiation’ and ‘specificity/clarity’. Inter-rater reliability was 46.2% (Araujo & Born 1985), Cohen’s (1960) kappa coefficient shows a spread from slight to moderate agreement, and the Odds Ratio (Viera, 2008) is above 1.0 for most categories.

2020 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
pp. 11-25
Author(s):  
Roland Johnsson

The overall aim of the thesis was to enhance and revive the practical understanding of the active ingredients in Transactional Analysis Psychotherapy (TA) and to define and lay down elements of TA that make it a distinct and replicable method of treatment. The thesis includes three empirical studies of a videotaped one-year long TA Group Therapy with 10 clients. Three different key areas of Transactional Analysis have been investigated with support of three different approaches. The first study (Johnsson, 2011 a) was a diagnostic client assessment with TA Script Analysis made as a reliability study. The second study (Johnsson, 2011 b) dealt with identification of different components in TA psychotherapy method with the use of Discourse Analysis and the third study (Johnsson & Stenlund, 2010) investigated the Therapeutic Alliance with a psychodynamic approach, using the CCRT method (the CORE Conflictual Relationship method) by Luborsky & Crits-Christoph (1990, 1998) and the Plan – Diagnosis method by Weiss & Sampson (1986). Study I: A script questionnaire and associated checklist developed by Ohlsson, Johnsson & Björk (1992) was used by the author and two professional colleagues to independently assess ten clients of a year-long transactional analysis therapy group conducted by the author. Ratings based on written responses at start of therapy were compared to ratings based on videotape interviews conducted by the author six years after termination of therapy. Moderately high inter-assessor reliability was found but intra-assessor reliability was low for the independent assessors; agreement increased for script components ‘primary injunction from father,’ ‘racket feeling’, ‘escape hatch’, ‘driver from father’ and ‘driver from mother’. Study II: Operational definitions of categorisations by McNeel (1975) were developed and applied by the author and an independent assessor to complete discourse analysis of 72 hours of transactional analysis group therapy in the style of Goulding & Goulding (1976, 1979) conducted during 1984/85. Results showed that the therapist used an average of 42% of the discourse space and that the therapy did indeed contain TA components, with the two main categories being ‘Feeling Contact’ and ‘Contracts’, and with particular use of TA techniques of ‘talking to Parent projections’, ‘make feeling statement’, ‘mutual negotiation’ and ‘specificity/clarity’. Inter-rater reliability was 46.2% (Araujo & Born 1985), Cohen’s (1960) kappa coefficient shows a spread from slight to moderate agreement, and the Odds Ratio (Viera, 2008) is above 1.0 for most categories. One intervention, "mutual negotiation", with moderate reliability could be identified as “TA typical". Study III: The study describes an investigation of the significance of the affective dimension of the therapeutic alliance (Bordin 1979), in a psychodynamic form of transactional analysis therapy after the style of “Redecision therapy” (Goulding & Goulding, 1979). We explored the client’s pattern of affective relationships by use of CCRT by Luborsky & Crits-Christoph (1990, 1998) and examined how the therapist responds to the client’s affective messages (“tests”) by use of the Plan-Diagnosis method (Weiss & Sampson, 1986). We found that “emotional” aspects play a more decisive role than has been envisioned in the TA redecision method and similar approaches of TA psychotherapy that emphasise contracts, tasks of therapy and a rational approach.


2018 ◽  
Vol 8 (4) ◽  
pp. 356-364
Author(s):  
Saeedeh Sedighi ◽  
Shahrokh Makvand Hoseini ◽  
Bahram Ali Qanbari Hashem Abad ◽  
Ali Mohebi Anabat ◽  
Mohammad Ebrahim Hokm Abadi ◽  
...  

2017 ◽  
Vol 41 (S1) ◽  
pp. S448-S448
Author(s):  
A. Taheri ◽  
T. Zandipour ◽  
M. Pourshahriari ◽  
M. Nafian Dehkordi

IntroductionAdolescence has significant effect on parental relationship. Group therapy in transactional analysis method is an effective method for the treatment program.AimTherefore, in this study, transactional analysis group therapy to improve the quality of parent–child relationship in adolescent female, were used.MethodThe sample was 40 adolescence high school girls were divided randomly into an experimental group and a control group. Both groups responded to measures of parent–child relationships. Eight sessions of one and a half hours, the components of the experimental group was trained in transactional analysis. The results were analyzed using t-test.FindingsThe results showed significant effect of transactional analysis group therapy on parent–child relationship adolescence, compared with the control group.ResultsTransactional analysis in the area of parent–child relationship requires further attention.Disclosure of interestThe authors have not supplied their declaration of competing interest.


2013 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
pp. 80-80
Author(s):  
Roland Johnsson

The focus of this workshop will be on the cons and pros of doing research on your own clinical practice. The workshop will be based on my work with my PhD dissertation titled Transactional Analysis Psychotherapy – Three Methods Describing a Transactional Analysis Group Therapy.  This is described in some detail in the paper produced to accompany my Keynote Speech, and included at the start of this Proceedings document, so I will not repeat that content here.


2019 ◽  
Vol 29 (Supplement_4) ◽  
Author(s):  
A Mohsenpour ◽  
L Biddle ◽  
K Bozorgmehr

Abstract Background Asylum seekers arriving in Germany are assigned to a local district and an accommodation centre wherein. We developed and validated a six-item questionnaire for rapid assessment of housing deterioration and investigated its association with inhabitant mental health. Methods Using cross-sectional data from a state-wide survey in Germany, we applied a random-effects modelling approach to estimate the exposure effect of housing deterioration on depression and general anxiety among a random sample of asylum seekers, using validated instruments (GAD2/PHQ2) for outcome variables. Housing deterioration was assessed on six items (windows/glass, walls/roof, garbage, graffiti, outside spaces, overall living environment) resulting in a deterioration score as exposure of interest. Additionally, we assessed the instrument’s intra- and inter-rater reliability and internal consistency. Results Of the 412 asylum seekers living in 58 accommodation centres, 45.7% reported symptoms of depression and 45.0% suffered general anxiety. Most centres (76.7%) were based in urban municipalities and 45.7% of inhabitants were living in an accommodation centre hosting ≥51 inhabitants. Preliminary adjusted odds ratio for accommodation centres with highest deterioration (Q 4) was 2.07 (0.67-6.40) for generalized anxiety, compared to 1.17 (0.45-3.08) for centres with lowest deterioration (Q 1). For depression, preliminary odds ratio was 1.92 (0.87-4.27) compared to 1.26 (0.63-2.50). The validation study confirmed inter-/intra-rater reliability (Brennan-Prediger coefficient: 0.81 and 0.92, respectively) and internal consistency (Crohnbach’s α: 0.80). Conclusions There are higher odds ratios for generalized anxiety disorder and depression among asylum seekers based on higher deterioration of housing environment. A questionnaire for rapid deterioration assessment and identification of accommodations needing further evaluation has been developed and successfully validated. Key messages Deterioration of small-scale housing environment is associated with poorer mental health for asylum seekers living in accommodation centres. A highly reliable new tool has been developed for rapid assessment of deterioration status of accommodation centres and identification of those needing further evaluation.


Author(s):  
Daniel Klein

Despite its well-known weaknesses, researchers continuously choose the kappa coefficient (Cohen, 1960, Educational and Psychological Measurement 20: 37–46; Fleiss, 1971, Psychological Bulletin 76: 378–382) to quantify agreement among raters. Part of kappa's persistent popularity seems to arise from a lack of available alternative agreement coefficients in statistical software packages such as Stata. In this article, I review Gwet’s (2014, Handbook of Inter-Rater Reliability) recently developed framework of interrater agreement coefficients. This framework extends several agreement coefficients to handle any number of raters, any number of rating categories, any level of measurement, and missing values. I introduce the kappaetc command, which implements this framework in Stata.


2011 ◽  
Vol 26 (14) ◽  
pp. 2834-2855 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michaela Zverina ◽  
Henderikus J. Stam ◽  
Robbie Babins-Wagner

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