In the present article of the Zeitschrift für Psychodrama und Soziometrie,
the expectations (self-assessed at the beginning of the treatment) and perception
(self-assessed upon the conclusion of the treatment) of the psychotherapy process
and outcome, psychotherapeutic factors and psychodrama specificities are presented
and analysed in a psychodrama group for adult participants held in an outpatient
psychiatric clinic. There were 12 male and 31 female participants, aged from 19 to
63 years, diagnosed with anxiety, depression, and borderline personality disorder or
committed into the hospital after their first psychotic episode. Questionnaires were
applied at the beginning of the treatment and at the end. Results showed that the
participants’ expectations regarding the psychotherapy process and outcomes were
quite high at the beginning of the treatment and rose significantly at the end. The
same was true of the participants’ expectations and perception of the specificities of
psychodrama—demonstrating the participants’ positive inclination towards this specific
psychotherapeutic way of conducting psychodrama. Even though there were no
age or gender differences, there were, differences between participants’ different diagnoses;
there were significant differences in the expectations of both psychotherapy
outcome and factors before treatment and perceptions of them after treatment.
|