Vulcan Maya
Graduate School of Creative Art Therapies, Faculty of Humanities & Social Sciences, Kibbutzim College of Education, Tel Aviv, Israel.
Front Psychol. 2021 Jan 20;11:548964. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2020.548964. eCollection 2020.
Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is a neuro-developmental condition, which requires a multi-disciplinary matrix of treatments, including functional, educational, and emotional interventions. The latter mode of treatment entails particular difficulties, inasmuch as the core deficits of this condition seem to challenge the very premises of traditional psychotherapy. Reciprocity, verbal, and symbolic expression and inter-subjective dynamics are often difficult to attain with clients diagnosed with ASD, and emotional treatment thus often turns out to be a frustrating process, which may well elicit questions as to the efficacy of psychotherapeutic emotional interventions. These core challenges, described in the literature, become particularly acute in view of the increasing number of clients diagnosed on the autistic spectrum in recent years, and the growing need for qualified therapists who have trained for working specifically with this condition. It seems, therefore, that it is high time for systematic research into the lived experience of therapists working with these clients in order to attain a better clinical and theoretical understanding of the condition itself and broaden the range of effective interventions. This study, informed by a phenomenological-hermeneutic approach which guided both the collection of data and its subsequent analysis, aims to address these issues by exploring the particular challenges faced by therapists in this field, the questions that come up in the process, modes of personal and professional coping, and the insights elicited by the therapeutic encounter. The research consisted of in-depth interviews with 28 practicing therapists from a broad range of clinical orientations, including dance/movement, arts, music, and drama therapists, clinical psychologists, and clinical social workers. The essential themes that emerged from the participants' responses and the analysis of the findings lend support to theoretical and developmental approaches, which focus on the primacy and the foundational role of the concrete body in inter-subjective relationships and in the therapeutic process, and indicate the potential efficacy of somatic and kinetic interventions. The clinical implications of this study are thus highly relevant to the training and support of therapists working with ASD, who should be encouraged to develop greater receptivity to non-verbal modes of interaction in the therapeutic process.
自闭症谱系障碍(ASD)是一种神经发育疾病,需要多学科的治疗模式,包括功能、教育和情感干预。后一种治疗方式存在特殊困难,因为这种疾病的核心缺陷似乎对传统心理治疗的前提提出了挑战。对于被诊断为ASD的患者,互惠、言语和符号表达以及主体间互动往往难以实现,因此情感治疗常常是一个令人沮丧的过程,这很可能引发关于心理治疗情感干预效果的质疑。鉴于近年来被诊断为自闭症谱系的患者数量不断增加,以及对专门针对这种疾病进行培训的合格治疗师的需求不断增长,文献中描述的这些核心挑战变得尤为严峻。因此,似乎是时候对与这些患者合作的治疗师的实际经验进行系统研究了,以便更好地从临床和理论上理解这种疾病本身,并拓宽有效干预的范围。本研究采用现象学-诠释学方法,该方法指导了数据的收集及其后续分析,旨在通过探索该领域治疗师面临的特殊挑战、过程中出现的问题、个人和专业应对方式以及治疗接触所引发的见解来解决这些问题。该研究包括对28名来自广泛临床方向的执业治疗师进行深入访谈,这些方向包括舞蹈/动作治疗师、艺术治疗师、音乐治疗师、戏剧治疗师、临床心理学家和临床社会工作者。参与者的回答和研究结果分析中出现的基本主题支持了理论和发展方法,这些方法侧重于具体身体在主体间关系和治疗过程中的首要地位和基础作用,并表明了躯体和运动干预的潜在效果。因此,本研究的临床意义与为患有ASD的患者提供治疗的治疗师的培训和支持高度相关,应鼓励这些治疗师在治疗过程中对非言语互动方式有更高的接受度。