What is ISTDP?

ISTDP stands for Intensive Short-Term Dynamic Psychotherapy. It’s a form of psychotherapy developed by Dr. Habib Davanloo in the 1960s and 70s and developed by Dr David Malan and others in the UK. It is an evidence-based therapy with a dynamic international research and practitioner community. ISTDP is designed to help people rapidly access and resolve unconscious emotional conflicts that contribute to psychological symptoms.

Key Features of ISTDP:

  • Emotion-focused: It emphasises the importance of experiencing and processing deep emotions, especially those that have been repressed or avoided.

  • Short-term and intensive: Sessions can be longer than traditional therapy, and the therapy is designed to achieve results more quickly.

  • Dynamic: It is based upon psychoanalytic principles, focusing on unconscious processes, defence mechanisms, and attachment patterns.

  • Active and direct: The therapist is often more active than in other modalities, helping the patient break through defences and access core feelings.

  • Somatic awareness: ISTDP pays close attention to bodily responses and physical symptoms as clues to emotional states and defences.

Goals of ISTDP:

  • To help patients overcome internal resistance to feeling and expressing emotions.

  • To resolve unconscious conflicts that contribute to anxiety, depression, personality disorders, and psychosomatic symptoms.

  • To promote lasting psychological change by accessing and integrating previously avoided emotional experiences.

Who It’s For:

ISTDP can be effective for people with:

  • Depression or anxiety

  • Medically unexplained physical symptoms

  • Personality disorders

  • Trauma-related issues

  • Relationship difficulties