| Title: | Psychotherapists’ mindful awareness and self-regulation in the prevention of empathic distress |
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| Authors: | ID Benda, Eva (Author) ID Žvelc, Maša (Author) |
| Files: | RAZ_Benda_Eva_2025.pdf (817,02 KB) MD5: ADC482BE6CA5829444B55F6A65E34B5E
https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s12671-025-02703-8
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| Language: | English |
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| Work type: | Article |
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| Typology: | 1.01 - Original Scientific Article |
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| Organization: | FAMNIT - Faculty of Mathematics, Science and Information Technologies
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| Abstract: | Objectives The aims of our research were to explore how psychotherapists recognize and experience empathic distress (ED), investigate their self-regulation strategies used within and outside psychotherapy sessions, and explore the role of mindful awareness during sessions in relation to self-regulation and ED. Methods We employed a qualitative, grounded theory methodology. We conducted interviews with eight Slovenian female integrative psychotherapists. Results Therapists reported experiencing intense emotions and physical reactions during empathic distress (ED), including anxiety, irritability, apathy, self-critique, resistance to work, fatigue, and physical pain. Many described prolonged periods of unrecognized ED. We found that mindful body awareness, a decentered perspective, and co-regulating with the client within therapy sessions were significant self-regulation strategies for therapists. Therapists also emphasized the importance of self-regulation before and after sessions and the value of supervision. Mindfulness, other meditation practices, and social- izing were highlighted as significant out-of-session regulation strategies for the prevention of ED. Conclusions This study highlights the critical need for psychotherapists to have tools for the early recognition of empathic distress. It introduces the Empathic Distress Prevention Model for Psychotherapists, emphasizing the role of mindful body awareness and other self-regulation strategies during therapy sessions, along with self-care outside of therapy. By addressing in-session self-regulation, rarely explored in psychotherapy literature, this study contributes novel insights with applications for therapists’ well-being, practice, education, and supervision. |
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| Keywords: | self regulation, mindfulness, empathic distress, well-being, decentered perspective, psychotherapy |
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| Publication version: | Version of Record |
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| Publication date: | 15.12.2025 |
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| Year of publishing: | 2025 |
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| Number of pages: | str. 3581-3597 |
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| Numbering: | Vol. 16, iss. 12 |
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| PID: | 20.500.12556/RUP-22493  |
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| UDC: | 159.9:615.851 |
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| ISSN on article: | 1868-8535 |
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| DOI: | 10.1007/s12671-025-02703-8  |
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| COBISS.SI-ID: | 262894851  |
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| Publication date in RUP: | 20.01.2026 |
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| Views: | 152 |
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| Downloads: | 3 |
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