Abstract
This is a single case study of a college aged woman with generalized anxiety disorder. Treatment consisted of psychodynamic psychotherapy, with an emphasis on facilitating separation and individuation, using hypnosis as a supportive, self-regulation skill for anxiety management. The patient’s symptoms were tracked using daily subjective, self-report measures over the 13-month treatment period. The simulation modeling approach for time-series (SMATS) was used to assess the phase change from baseline to treatment. Symptoms tracked included anxiety peaks, preoccupation with time, interpersonal closeness, and self-sacrificing of self for others. The patient’s worries about time decreased significantly over the course of treatment. There was also a trend of both less interference of anxiety in the patient’s daily tasks and less self-sacrificing behaviors in her interpersonal relationships. Utility of an idiographic and also quantified research methodology for treatment outcome studies is discussed.
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