Abstract
AbstractMetacognitive Reflection and Insight Therapy (MERIT) was originally developed as an integrative recovery-oriented therapeutic approach to address the needs of people with a diagnosis of schizophrenia and other forms of severe mental illness. The approach, conceptualized as transtheoretical, aims to promote a more coherent and synthetic sense of self, through stimulating insight, sense of coherence, and metacognitive capacity. We argue that MERIT therapy, designed to facilitate peoples’ ability to form complex ideas about themselves and others and to use this knowledge to respond to psychological problems, has application in addressing deficits associated with bipolar disorder (BD), where there may be a significant injury to the person’s sense of self. That is, the therapy addresses the nascent sense of self in a context where disturbance of mood is dominant, and in relation to the experience of episodic manic episodes which may be understood as dissociative events, often associated with shame. The application of the therapeutic approach, which we term MERIT-BD draws upon MERIT’s primary principle of facilitating complexity and integration of the self, and additionally addresses shame, allowing for the facilitation of metacognitive capacity and insight in the context of finding the person. This approach will be illustrated with case vignettes illustrating the application of key components of MERIT-BD. Early findings drawn from a series of case studies are encouraging.
Funder
Queensland University of Technology
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Clinical Psychology
Cited by
1 articles.
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