Dynamic Interpersonal Therapy
Dynamic interpersonal therapy (DIT) is a simple, 16-session individual therapy protocol for mood disorder.
About Dynamic Interpersonal Therapy (DIT)
The protocol draws on the work of the Expert Reference Group on clinical competencies, which identified key components of manualised psychoanalytic/ psychodynamic therapies. DIT is an easy to acquire, semi-structured treatment protocol. There are plans to roll DIT out nationally within the NHS Talking Therapies programme for work with depressed patients. DIT training is therefore NHS Talking Therapies supported.
Background to the development of DIT
DIT was explicitly developed out of the psychoanalytic/psychodynamic competences (Lemma et al., 2008) that provided the basis for the It is drawn from the psychoanalytic/psychodynamic approaches that have the strongest evidence for efficacy, based on the outcome of controlled trials. It is specifically designed to address symptoms of depression and anxiety.
DIT and NHS Talking Therapies
DIT is the brief psychodynamic therapy model now offered at Step 3 within NHS Talking Therapies. The National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE) guidelines for depression state that brief psychodynamic therapy is one option that can be considered for depressed patients, either when the patient has not responded to cognitive behavioural therapy interventions, or where the patient actively opts for a psychodynamic approach.
This is a title. Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Praesent vel dui blandit, rhoncus purus at, varius mauris. Nullam id ornare neque, id vehicula nibh. Phasellus viverra, nulla at tincidunt varius, urna ipsum tincidunt leo
DIT founders and course director
Peter Fonagy
Professor of Psychoanalysis and Developmental Science and Head of the Division of Psychology and Language Sciences at University College London
Peter Fonagy, OBE FMedSci FBA FAcSS PhD is Professor of Psychoanalysis and Developmental Science and Head of the Division of Psychology and Language Sciences at University College London; Chief Executive of the Anna Freud Centre, London; and holds visiting professorships at Yale and Harvard Medical Schools

Alessandra Lemma
Collaboration Lead for joint projects between the Tavistock and Portman NHS Foundation Trust and the Anna Freud Centre
Courses this tutor is involved in Dynamic Interpersonal Therapy Dynamic Interpersonal Therapy for Complex Care

Mary Hepworth
Professor of Psychoanalysis
Mary Hepworth (formerly Mary Target), PhD, first trained in clinical psychology and worked for ten years in NHS acute adult psychiatric services.

Deborah Abrahams
Psychoanalyst
Deborah Abrahams is a Psychoanalyst registered with the British Society of Psychoanalysis.