Society for the Advancement of Psychotherapy

Tag

psychodynamic

Articles tagged "psychodynamic".

20 articles

My “Best Practices” in Psychotherapy: Part I
Ethics & Legal+2 more

My “Best Practices” in Psychotherapy: Part I

As I write this, I am 75 ½ years old, doing psychotherapy part-time, and coming off the highest practice income month ever in the history of my 50-year career. I continue to find the work captivating and meaningful. As one of my graduate school professors, the renowned psychiatrist Viktor Frankl, M.D., used to remind us, […]

Steven J. Hendlin, Ph.D.

Steven J. Hendlin, Ph.D.

October 14, 2024

My “Best Practices” in Psychotherapy: Part II
Ethics & Legal+2 more

My “Best Practices” in Psychotherapy: Part II

Techniques: Weaving and Blending Surface and Depth I have found it a powerful combination to utilize both pointing out and working with surface behaviors as they occur and alternatively, interpreting unconscious dynamics as appropriate. The surface—what is happening in the present as the patient presents themself—blended with making conscious what has been unconscious, may work […]

Steven J. Hendlin, Ph.D.

Steven J. Hendlin, Ph.D.

October 14, 2024

Helping Patients Interpret Ambivalence about Change
Assessment & Treatment+1 more

Helping Patients Interpret Ambivalence about Change

Context More and more, I notice therapy clients asking directly for insight. They want to understand why they dilly-dally on their goals, waffle on difficult decisions, envision change but don’t plan for it. “…If I feel I want to do X, and I say I want to do X, why can’t I just do it?” […]

Dana R. Falk, Ph.D.

Dana R. Falk, Ph.D.

November 15, 2021

Understanding the Hows and Whys of Group Therapy
Article & Book Reviews+1 more

Understanding the Hows and Whys of Group Therapy

In the competition between therapy modalities in the United States today, group psychotherapy is clearly on the ropes. As I write these words, the Commission for the Recognition of Specialties and Proficiencies in Professional Psychology (CRSPPP) of the American Psychological Association is considering another petition offered by APA Division 49 (Group Psychotherapy) to have group […]

Nancy W. Kelly, Ph.D., LCSW

Nancy W. Kelly, Ph.D., LCSW

August 6, 2017

An Empirical Analysis of Mental State Talk and Affect Regulation in Two Single-Cases of Psychodynamic Child Therapy
Assessment & Treatment

An Empirical Analysis of Mental State Talk and Affect Regulation in Two Single-Cases of Psychodynamic Child Therapy

Abstract Literature has shown the importance of mentalizing techniques in symptom remission and emotional understanding; however, no study to date has looked at the dynamic relations between mental state talk and affect regulation in the psychotherapy process. From a psychodynamic perspective, the emergence of the child’s capacity to regulate affect through the therapist’s reflection on […]

Sibel Halfon + 2 more

Sibel Halfon + 2 more

June 7, 2017

Is Psychotherapy Integration Always Beneficial?
Article & Book Reviews+2 more

Is Psychotherapy Integration Always Beneficial?

Evidence-based practice in psychology has been defined as the integration of the best available research, clinical expertise, and the individual client’s characteristics, values, and preferences (APA, 2006). This definition suggests that psychotherapists should be able, and willing, to integrate techniques from different theoretical orientations based on the context. Although integration is important, it is also […]

Joshua K. Swift, Ph.D.

Joshua K. Swift, Ph.D.

January 29, 2017

Effectiveness of Couple Therapy
Assessment & Treatment

Effectiveness of Couple Therapy

Abstract Couple therapy outcomes tend to be judged by randomized controlled trial evidence, which comes primarily from the United States. United Kingdom and European outcome studies have tended to be naturalistic and there is a debate as to whether “laboratory” (RCT) studies are useful benchmarks for the outcomes of “clinic” (naturalistic) studies, not least because […]

David Hewison + 2 more

David Hewison + 2 more

December 8, 2016

Master Supervisors Show & Discuss Their Supervision Session Videos
Supervision & Training

Master Supervisors Show & Discuss Their Supervision Session Videos

Have you ever seen anyone else doing supervision—except your own? Whenever I am giving a workshop on clinical supervision to psychotherapy supervisors, I ask if any of them have every seen another psychologist supervising a trainee, let along watched a master supervisor doing so. On every occasion, only a few hands go up. Although clinical […]

Hanna Levenson, Ph.D.

Hanna Levenson, Ph.D.

December 4, 2016

Finding the Right Fit for Intensive Short Term Dynamic Psychotherapy
Article & Book Reviews+1 more

Finding the Right Fit for Intensive Short Term Dynamic Psychotherapy

If you are a psychotherapist of a certain age you no doubt remember the 1982 New York Times Magazine article on Short-Term Dynamic Psychotherapy (STDP; Davanloo, 1980) by journalist Dava Sobel. In contrasting STDP (“the most aggressive form of psychic medicine to rest on the principles of Sigmund Freud”) to traditional psychoanalytic psychotherapy, Sobel noted, […]

David Hellerstein, M.D.

David Hellerstein, M.D.

September 22, 2016

Client Attachment in a Randomized Clinical Trial of Psychoanalytic and Cognitive-Behavioral Psychotherapy for Bulimia Nervosa
Assessment & Treatment

Client Attachment in a Randomized Clinical Trial of Psychoanalytic and Cognitive-Behavioral Psychotherapy for Bulimia Nervosa

Abstract In the context of a randomized clinical trial of psychoanalytic psychotherapy (PPT) versus cognitive behavior therapy (CBT) for bulimia nervosa (BN), this study performed secondary analyses of (a) the relation between attachment and pretreatment symptom levels, (b) whether client pretreatment attachment moderated treatment outcome, (c) whether change in client attachment was associated with symptomatic change, and (d) whether […]

Sarah Ingrid Franksdatter Daniel + 2 more

Sarah Ingrid Franksdatter Daniel + 2 more

June 14, 2016

Using Imagination and Literature to Enhance Therapeutic Abilities
Article & Book Reviews+1 more

Using Imagination and Literature to Enhance Therapeutic Abilities

Jeremy Holmes (2014) offers here a book, rich with the wisdom of an experienced clinician, that celebrates the imagination as an essential component of the psychotherapeutic process, using examples from literature to provide insight into important aspects of clinical work. He argues that literature and psychodynamic therapy share an “aesthetics” based upon a “paradoxical combination […]

David H. Thurn, Ph.D., LCSW-R

David H. Thurn, Ph.D., LCSW-R

September 28, 2015

A Developmental Model for Healthy Individuation of the Transgender Client
Article & Book Reviews+2 more

A Developmental Model for Healthy Individuation of the Transgender Client

Informed by the author’s 37 years of clinical experience with transgender individuals, this article presents an introductory model for clinicians who provide depth psychotherapy to this population. The author points out that primary concerns of transgender individuals in psychotherapy are often the same as most people; yet developing their transgender self without the “mirroring” from […]

Wei-Chun “Vivi” Hua, Psy.D.

Wei-Chun “Vivi” Hua, Psy.D.

September 24, 2015

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