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  1. How Effective is Supportive Therapy? • Meta-analysis of Non Directive Supportive Psychotherapy (NDSP): – Any unstructured therapy without specific psychological techniques other than those common to all approaches. • NDSP vs Waitlist, g=0.58 (95% CI 0.45-0.72) • NDSP vs other therapies, g=-0.20 (95% CI -0.32 to -0.08 )

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  2. Jan 17, 2020 · INTRODUCTION. Supportive psychotherapy (SP) is possibly the most ubiquitously used psychotherapy but is less researched. Since the beginning, compared to other psychotherapies, it is considered as an “inferior” therapy and is referred to as “Cinderella of Psychotherapies,” which can be used in multitude of clinical scenarios and settings.

    • Sandeep Grover, Ajit Avasthi, Mukesh Jagiwala
    • 10.4103/psychiatry.IndianJPsychiatry_768_19
    • 2020
    • 2020/01
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  4. Jul 30, 2020 · Supportive psychotherapy can also be combined with cognitive-behavioral therapy, especially to address symptoms of depression and anxiety. Outcome studies of supportive psychotherapy have found it beneficial for many diagnostic entities, including anxiety and depressive disorders, schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, personality disorders, eating ...

  5. supportive, it is not therapy…if it is therapy, it is not supportive.”3 Since its lowly beginning, however, supportive psychotherapy has been proven highly effective, and clinicians have developed operating principles that distinguish it from expressive psychotherapy (Table 1, page 31).4 To help you make good use of supportive psycho-

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  6. As supportive psychotherapy was negatively de-fined as not-psychoanalysis, it became an umbrella term for every form of psychotherapy other than psychoanalysis itself. All evidence-based therapies, such as cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) and interpersonal psychotherapy (IPT), technically fall under the rubric.

  7. Oct 1, 1994 · Supportive therapy techniques are defined as, 1) reducing dysfunction behavior, 2) reducing stress triggers, 3) supporting and improving coping strategies, 4) maximizing treatment, and 5) helping ...

  8. some form of “supportive therapy” (1–10). Indeed, Hellerstein et al. (11) have argued that supportive therapy should be viewed as the treatment model of choice, or default therapy, for most patients. Nonetheless, confronted with a confusing amal-gam of psychotherapeutic theories and tech-niques—cognitive-behavioral therapy (12–16),

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