Read The Theory and Practice of Group Psychotherapy Online
Authors: Irvin D. Yalom,Molyn Leszcz
Tags: #Psychology, #General, #Psychotherapy, #Group
23
Do not neglect to consider the real meaning of the help-rejecting complainer’s complaint. Some clinicians propose that there may be a hidden positive or adaptive value to the unrelenting complaints that needs to be understood.
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29
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30
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31
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46 (1996): 357–77. S. Budman, S. Cooley, A. Demby, G. Koppenaal, J. Koslof, and T. Powers, “A Model of Time-Effective Group Psychotherapy for Patients with Personality Disorders: A Clinical Model,”
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46 (1996): 329–55. A. Bateman and P. Fonagy, “Treatment of Borderline Personality Disorder with Psychoanalytically Oriented Partial Hospitalization: An 18-Month Follow-Up,”
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155 (1998): 1733–39. J. Ogrodniczuk, W. Piper, A. Joyce, and M. McCallum, “Using DSM Axis IV Formulation to Predict Outcome in Short-Term Individual Psychotherapy,”
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Kernberg, “An Ego Psychology Object Relations Theory.” Kernberg,
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40
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Interpersonal Group Psychotherapy for Borderline Personality Disorder.
Bateman and Fonagy, “Treatment of Borderline Personality Disorder.” American Psychiatric Association, “Practice Guideline for the Treatment of Patients with Borderline Personality Disorder,”
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158 (suppl 11 2001): 1–52.
41
L. Horwitz, “Group Psychotherapy for Borderline and Narcissistic Patients,”
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29 (1979): 325–45. R. Kretsch, Y. Goren, and A. Wasserman, “Change Patterns of Borderline Patients in Individual and Group Therapy,”
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37 (1987): 95–112. Klein et al., “The Axis II Group.” J. Grobman, “The Borderline Patient in Group Psychotherapy: A Case Report,”
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30 (1980): 299–318. B. Finn and S. Shakir, “Intensive Group Psychotherapy of Borderline Patients,”
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15 (1991): 56–64. S. Shakir, personal communication, February 1994. M. Leszcz, I. Yalom, and M. Norden, “The Value of Inpatient Group Psychotherapy: Patients’ Perceptions,”
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46 (1996): 357–77.
42
M. Leszcz, “Group Psychotherapy of the Borderline Patient.”
43
Klein et al., “The Axis II Group.”
44
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45
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51 (2001): 379–98.
46
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30 (1980): 389–403. Klein et al., “The Axis II Group.”
47
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48
Shedler and Westen, “Refining Personality Disorder Diagnosis.”
49
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50
Kernberg, “An Ego Psychology Object Relations Theory.” Kernberg,
Borderline Conditions and Pathological Narcissism.
51
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52
The tasks of therapy may be facilitated by theoretical frames of reference such as a self psychological framework or an intersubjective framework. Both approaches sharpen our focus on the subjective experience of the narcissistically vulnerable client. Leszcz, “Group Psychotherapy of the Characterologically Difficult Patient.” Livingston and Livingston, “Conflict and Aggression in Group Psychotherapy.” M. Baker and H. Baker, “Self-Psychological Contributions to the Theory and Practice of Group Psychotherapy,” in
Group Therapy in Clinical Practice,
ed. A. Alonso and H. Swiller (Washington, D.C.: American Psychiatric Press, 1993), 49–68. I. Harwood, “Distinguishing Between the Facilitating and the Self-Serving Charismatic Group Leader,”
Group
27 (2003): 121–29. W. Stone, “Self Psychology and the Higher Mental Functioning Hypothesis: Contemporary Theories,”
Group Analysis
29 (1996): 169–81. D. Brandchaft and R. Stolorow, “The Difficult Patient: Intersubjective Perspective,” in
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CHAPTER 14
1
E. Paykel, “Psychotherapy, Medication Combinations, and Compliance.”
Journal of Clinical Psychiatry
56 (1995): 24–30. D. Greben, “Integrative Dimensions of Psychotherapy Training,”
Canadian Journal of Psychiatry
49 (2004): 238–48.
2
H. Bernard and S. Drob, “The Experience of Patients in Conjoint Individual and Group Therapy,”
International Journal of Group Psychotherapy
35 (1985): 129–46. K. Porter, “Combined Individual and Group Psychotherapy: A Review of the Literature, 1965–1978,”
International Journal of Group Psychotherapy
30 (1980): 107–14.
3
K. Schwartz, “Concurrent Group and Individual Psychotherapy in a Psychiatric Day Hospital for Depressed Elderly,”
International Journal of Group Psychotherapy
54 (2004): 177–201.
4
B. Roller and V. Nelson, “Group Psychotherapy Treatment of Borderline Personalities,”
International Journal of Group Psychotherapy
49 (1999): 369–85. F. DeZuleta and P. Mark, “Attachment and Contained Splitting: A Combined Approach of Group and Individual Therapy to the Treatment of Patients from Borderline Personality Disorder,”
Group Analysis
33 (2000): 486–500. E. Fried, “Combined Group and Individual Therapy with Passive Narcissistic Patients,”
International Journal of Group Psychotherapy
5 (1955): 194.