Table of Contents

Interpersonal Therapy (IPT)

Primer

Interpersonal Psychotherapy (IPT) is a structured and manual-based treatment that targets the social and interpersonal context of an individual's illness. The therapy focuses on the “here and now” and deals with grief, dysfunctional relationships, interpersonal conflicts, and role transitions. IPT is specifically indicated for individuals with a major depressive episode.

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History

Length

Indications

Focus

IPT typically focuses on one of four focal interpersonal problem areas:

  1. Grief or Bereavement (e.g. - death of a person close to the patient)
  2. Role disputes (e.g. - poor interpersonal relationship and non-reciprocal role expectations between two individuals)
  3. Role transitions (e.g. - going from being employed to unemployed, working to retiring, single to married)
  4. Social deficits with interpersonal deficits or sensitivity (e.g. - there are no clear acute interpersonal events associated with the depressive symptoms, but rather there is a longstanding history of deficits or contention in interpersonal relationships)

Key Concepts

Structure

Opening

Middle

Final

Resources