Case Formulation in Contemporary Psychotherapy presents a new approach to case conceptualization and case formulation, making meaning from each clinical case and using every piece of data available.
Case Formulation in Contemporary Psychotherapy presents a new approach to case conceptualization and case formulation, making meaning from each clinical case and using every piece of data available.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Robert Mendelsohn (Ph.D., ABPP) is Professor of Psychology and former Dean at the Gordon F. Derner School of Psychology of Adelphi University, USA. He has been teaching psychodynamic psychotherapy to mental health professionals for almost 50 years.
Inhaltsangabe
Foreword by Robert F. Bornstein Preface Acknowledgments Introduction Chapter 1 The History of Case Formulation and Treatment Planning; From Freud (1918) to W. Reich, (1946) From Reich to T. Reik, (1948, 1959) from Reik to Bion, (1962, 1976) and Winnicott, (1960, 1971) to Billow & Mendelsohn, (1990) Chapter 2 The Fourteen Clinical Processes Involved in My Approach to Case Formulation including: Countertransference, Inducement, Enactment, Projective Identification, Gratuitous Remarks, The Clinical Use of Many Processes Including Paradigmatic Techniques (And 'My Technical Use of My 'Sense of Humor') Chapter 3 Early Clinical Examples of My Knowing Without Consciously Knowing What I Unconsciously Knew Chapter 4 What Is Parallel Process and How Does It Enrich Our Understanding of Psychodynamic Case Formulation and the Preconscious Transmission of Clinical Data? Chapter 5 Magical Processes in Psychotherapy and The Magic of Dream Interpretation Chapter 6 Magical Processes in Case Consultation, Case Formulation and Treatment Planning Chapter 7 Conclusion: Creating A Space for Magic to Occur/Teaching the Magic to Others About The Author
Foreword by Robert F. Bornstein
Preface
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Chapter 1
The History of Case Formulation and Treatment Planning; From Freud (1918) to W. Reich, (1946) From Reich to T. Reik, (1948, 1959) from Reik to Bion, (1962, 1976) and Winnicott, (1960, 1971) to Billow & Mendelsohn, (1990)
Chapter 2
The Fourteen Clinical Processes Involved in My Approach to Case Formulation including: Countertransference, Inducement, Enactment, Projective Identification, Gratuitous Remarks, The Clinical Use of Many Processes Including Paradigmatic Techniques (And 'My Technical Use of My 'Sense of Humor')
Chapter 3
Early Clinical Examples of My Knowing Without Consciously Knowing What I Unconsciously Knew
Chapter 4
What Is Parallel Process and How Does It Enrich Our Understanding of Psychodynamic Case Formulation and the Preconscious Transmission of Clinical Data?
Chapter 5
Magical Processes in Psychotherapy and The Magic of Dream Interpretation
Chapter 6
Magical Processes in Case Consultation, Case Formulation and Treatment Planning
Chapter 7
Conclusion: Creating A Space for Magic to Occur/Teaching the Magic to Others
Foreword by Robert F. Bornstein Preface Acknowledgments Introduction Chapter 1 The History of Case Formulation and Treatment Planning; From Freud (1918) to W. Reich, (1946) From Reich to T. Reik, (1948, 1959) from Reik to Bion, (1962, 1976) and Winnicott, (1960, 1971) to Billow & Mendelsohn, (1990) Chapter 2 The Fourteen Clinical Processes Involved in My Approach to Case Formulation including: Countertransference, Inducement, Enactment, Projective Identification, Gratuitous Remarks, The Clinical Use of Many Processes Including Paradigmatic Techniques (And 'My Technical Use of My 'Sense of Humor') Chapter 3 Early Clinical Examples of My Knowing Without Consciously Knowing What I Unconsciously Knew Chapter 4 What Is Parallel Process and How Does It Enrich Our Understanding of Psychodynamic Case Formulation and the Preconscious Transmission of Clinical Data? Chapter 5 Magical Processes in Psychotherapy and The Magic of Dream Interpretation Chapter 6 Magical Processes in Case Consultation, Case Formulation and Treatment Planning Chapter 7 Conclusion: Creating A Space for Magic to Occur/Teaching the Magic to Others About The Author
Foreword by Robert F. Bornstein
Preface
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Chapter 1
The History of Case Formulation and Treatment Planning; From Freud (1918) to W. Reich, (1946) From Reich to T. Reik, (1948, 1959) from Reik to Bion, (1962, 1976) and Winnicott, (1960, 1971) to Billow & Mendelsohn, (1990)
Chapter 2
The Fourteen Clinical Processes Involved in My Approach to Case Formulation including: Countertransference, Inducement, Enactment, Projective Identification, Gratuitous Remarks, The Clinical Use of Many Processes Including Paradigmatic Techniques (And 'My Technical Use of My 'Sense of Humor')
Chapter 3
Early Clinical Examples of My Knowing Without Consciously Knowing What I Unconsciously Knew
Chapter 4
What Is Parallel Process and How Does It Enrich Our Understanding of Psychodynamic Case Formulation and the Preconscious Transmission of Clinical Data?
Chapter 5
Magical Processes in Psychotherapy and The Magic of Dream Interpretation
Chapter 6
Magical Processes in Case Consultation, Case Formulation and Treatment Planning
Chapter 7
Conclusion: Creating A Space for Magic to Occur/Teaching the Magic to Others
About The Author
Rezensionen
"A professor's professor, Dr. Mendelsohn brings one of his legendary courses to the world outside of his beloved school. With this book, he extends Theodore Reik's legacy and provides a contemporary psychoanalytic guide to case formulation and treatment planning that is at once practical and magical." J. Christopher Muran, Ph.D., Gordon F. Derner School of Psychology, Adelphi University; Mount Sinai Beth Israel Psychotherapy Research Program, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai; NYU Postdoctoral Program in Psychotherapy and Psychoanalysis, New York University
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