ABSTRACT

Freud once humorously remarked that "Anyone who wants to make a living from the treatment of nervous patients must clearly be able to do something to help them". It is amazing how frequently this simple precept is ignored and, when a patient does not get well, how often the failure is attributed to lack of proper motivation, diminutive ego strength, latent schizophrenia, and a multitude of assorted resistances. Difficulties that arise during therapy are not due to a deliberate conspiracy of neglect on the part of the therapist. They usually come about because of obstructive situations that develop in work with patients with which the therapist is unprepared to cope.

During his psychiatric career the author, who spent time both teaching and supervising, collected and collated questions from students and graduate therapists who had raised concerns about psychotherapy that related to such obstructive situations. Originally published in 1982, this volume contains both those questions and his answers.

chapter |15 pages

Psychoanalysis

chapter |5 pages

Group Therapy

chapter |10 pages

Family Therapy

chapter |18 pages

Marital (Couples) Therapy

chapter |6 pages

Cognitive Therapy

chapter |14 pages

Hypnosis

chapter |15 pages

Somatic Therapy

chapter |4 pages

Short-term Therapy

chapter |13 pages

Miscellaneous Therapies

chapter |4 pages

Emergencies

chapter |14 pages

Psychotherapeutic Practices

chapter |8 pages

Theoretical Aspects

chapter |11 pages

Development

chapter |6 pages

Psychodynamics

chapter |7 pages

Prognosis

chapter |14 pages

Outcome

chapter |3 pages

Prevention

chapter |43 pages

Conclusion