Focusing the Clinical Supervision on the Therapist's Developmental Trauma: A Single Case Study

Am J Psychoanal. 2023 Sep;83(3):371-395. doi: 10.1057/s11231-023-09410-0.

Abstract

The term developmental trauma (DT) refers to the impact of stressful events which occur cumulatively within the child's relevant relationships and contexts, and usually early in life. According to several authors, DT depends on the caregiver's inadequate intersubjective recognition of one or more aspects of the evolving individual's identity. In the clinical and empirical literature, the study of therapists' developmental trauma, and how it might constitute a relevant variable in the clinical exchange, seem to be underrepresented. In this paper, through the analysis of the supervision process of a clinical case, we show how the therapeutic relationship may implicitly take the form of a "dance" between the patient's and therapist's DT, that prevents the therapist from intersubjectively attuning with the patient; and how a supervision process peculiarly focused on the therapist's DT can effectively promote this attunement and a good clinical outcome.

Keywords: developmental trauma; intersubjectivity; supervision; therapeutic relationship.

MeSH terms

  • Child
  • Humans
  • Preceptorship*
  • Professional-Patient Relations*