Abstract
Transference-focused psychotherapy (TFP), developed and studied as an extended individual psychotherapy for patients with borderline personality disorder (BPD), rests on a rich theoretical foundation informed by psychoanalytic object relations theory. "Applied TFP" is a developing initiative using TFP principles in multiple clinical situations other than the standard extended individual psychotherapy, which has been empirically validated and is detailed in the TFP treatment manual. The growing application of TFP principles in innovative, overlapping ways has been focused primarily in three spheres: (1) the integration of TFP principles in pluralistic theoretical approaches to treatment of patients with personality disorder pathology; (2) the use of TFP elements in multiple teaching situations as part of curricula for trainees and practicing clinicians, and (3) the employment of TFP theory and interventions in settings across a continuum of patient acuity, tailored for patients with varying diagnoses. The use of TFP principles in the situations described directly addresses needs emerging in particular contexts that reflect specific requirements of clinician practice and training and of broader public health missions.
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