Interpersonal and Social Rhythm Therapy
Interpersonal and social rhythm therapy (IPSRT) is a manualized psychotherapy developed primarily for bipolar disorder that combines interpersonal psychotherapy with techniques to stabilise daily routines and sleep-wake patterns. It rests on the idea that disruptions to social rhythms and interpersonal relationships can precipitate mood episodes in vulnerable people.
Definition
Interpersonal and social rhythm therapy is a structured psychotherapy that integrates interpersonal psychotherapy with behavioural regulation of daily routines and sleep-wake cycles, aiming to stabilise circadian and social rhythms and resolve interpersonal problems in order to reduce mood instability.
Scope
This entry describes the social zeitgeber rationale, the interpersonal and rhythm-regulation components, and the principal trial evidence in bipolar disorder. It is a reference overview of the model and is not a treatment protocol or a basis for individualized care decisions.
Core questions
- How does the social zeitgeber hypothesis link routine disruption to mood episodes?
- What does IPSRT add to standard interpersonal psychotherapy?
- What does trial evidence suggest about IPSRT in bipolar disorder?
Key concepts
- Social zeitgebers and circadian rhythm
- Social rhythm regularity
- Interpersonal problem areas
- Sleep-wake regulation
- Mood-episode relapse prevention
- Social Rhythm Metric
Key theories
- Social zeitgeber / instability model
- The model holds that life events disrupt social rhythms (zeitgebers) and biological circadian rhythms, which in biologically vulnerable individuals can trigger mood episodes; stabilising routines is therefore proposed to protect against relapse.
Mechanisms
IPSRT proposes that mood episodes in vulnerable individuals are precipitated when life events disrupt social routines and biological rhythms. The therapy combines interpersonal psychotherapy (addressing grief, role transitions, role disputes and interpersonal deficits) with behavioural strategies that help people track and regularise daily activities and sleep-wake timing, often using a social rhythm metric. Greater routine stability is hypothesised to support circadian regularity and reduce the likelihood of new episodes.
Clinical relevance
IPSRT is studied mainly as an adjunct to pharmacotherapy in bipolar disorder, and its routine-stabilising principles are relevant to nursing support around sleep hygiene and daily structure. This is a reference description of the approach and does not constitute treatment guidance for any individual.
Epidemiology
Bipolar disorder is a recurrent mood disorder for which relapse prevention is a central clinical aim; IPSRT was developed specifically to address the role of rhythm and interpersonal disruption in such recurrences, and is one of several adjunctive psychosocial treatments studied in this population.
Evidence & guidelines
A two-year randomized trial reported that receiving IPSRT in the acute phase was associated with longer time to a new mood episode in bipolar I disorder. Some guidelines list IPSRT among adjunctive psychosocial options for bipolar disorder; the strength and breadth of evidence remain narrower than for CBT, and current sources should be consulted.
History
IPSRT was developed by Ellen Frank and colleagues at the University of Pittsburgh in the 1990s, building on Gerald Klerman and Myrna Weissman's interpersonal psychotherapy and on chronobiological research into social zeitgebers. It was manualised and tested in randomized trials for bipolar disorder, with two-year outcomes reported in 2005.
Key figures
- Ellen Frank
- David J. Kupfer
- Holly A. Swartz
- Gerald L. Klerman
Related topics
Seminal works
- frank-2005
- frank-2000
- klerman-1984
Frequently asked questions
- What condition is IPSRT mainly designed for?
- IPSRT was developed chiefly for bipolar disorder, where stabilising daily routines, sleep-wake patterns and interpersonal relationships is thought to help prevent mood episodes, usually alongside medication.
- How does IPSRT relate to interpersonal psychotherapy?
- IPSRT incorporates the interpersonal problem areas of interpersonal psychotherapy and adds a structured focus on regularising social rhythms and sleep-wake cycles, reflecting the social zeitgeber model of mood instability.