Mentalization Based Therapy Training
Mentalization Based Therapy - Parenting under Pressure (MBT-PP)
Mentalization Based Therapy – Parenting under Pressure is a 10-session therapeutic model developed to help couples, parents who are together and separated parents who face a range of challenges and difficulties, particularly in relation to ongoing anger, hostility and difficulty in seeing their partner’s perspective.
These include parents locked in entrenched conflict about their children and couples/parents who are involved in a type of domestic violence/couple conflict known as situational couple violence.
Our way of working is inspired by the original work of Professors Peter Fonagy and Anthony Bateman on mentalization, which they initially developed as a way of helping individuals.
About the intervention
Our 10-session mentalization-based approach helps couples/parents to:
- focus on, and think about, not only the feelings and emotions they are experiencing, but those of their children too, learning to modify their behaviour
- appreciate that their partner's thoughts and feelings may be different to their own, and that their partner may have a different perspective than they do
- be curious about possible differences between themselves and their partner, and especially about the reasons why people may behave as they do.
Training dates
Dates to be confirmed for 2024.
The training will be held online.
Cost
The cost of this 5-day training is £1,500 per person. Ongoing weekly supervision is required in order to be able to practice, and this is available at £100 per practitioner (over 42 weeks per year – i.e. £4,200).
The total cost of the training is therefore £5,700 per person.
Qualification
Certificate in Mentalization Based Therapy – Parenting under Pressure
Eligibility criteria
You will have either a clinical qualification or experience in working with highly conflicted parents.
How to make an application enquiry
Please fill in the form below, making sure to select MBT - PP 5-Day Training from the 'Range of Courses' dropdown list:
To find out further details about the training, please email Sarah Ingram, Head of Strategic Partnerships & Programmes, at
I absolutely loved supporting the parents think about better ways to cope with emotions, such as when they focused on their breathing technique and did some mindfulness exercises.
Emma
Relationship/
Family Practitioner
Read about our other trainings for organisations including courses for front line practitioners to reduce parental conflict, and bespoke trainings.
Evidence base
Mentalization based therapy was trialled with more than two and a half thousand parents during the Government’s Reducing Parental Conflict Programme between 2018 and 2022.
Evaluation of this programme found that:
- Mentalization based therapy showed the greatest improvements of all the interventions tested for separated parents across all relationship measures i.e. relationship warmth and relationship satisfaction, and the largest average reductions in hostility and open hostility[1]
- Mentalization based therapy showed the greatest improvements for intact parents across all relationship measures i.e. relationship warmth and relationship satisfaction, and the largest average reductions in hostility and open hostility[2]
- Children whose parent(s) completed Mentalization based therapy showed improvements in wellbeing across all measures[3]
- For Mentalization based therapy – and Mentalization based therapy alone – there was ‘no evidence that conflict returned back to pre-intervention levels’, with reductions in conflict being sustained for at least 6 months after the intervention[4].
Footnotes
[1] Reducing Parental Conflict Programme 2018-2022 – Interventions Report p.61.
[2] Reducing Parental Conflict Programme 2018-2022 – Interventions Report p.64.
[3] Reducing Parental Conflict Programme 2018-2022 – Interventions Report p.67.
[4] Reducing Parental Conflict Programme 2018-2022 – Interventions Report p.48.