Results 301 to 310 of about 49,323 (346)

The dying psychotherapist

American Journal of Psychiatry, 1986
A previously unpublished paper by a dying psychotherapist describes the therapeutic use of the ensuing grief reactions of five patients to his terminal illness to help them deal with the effects of their previous losses, deprivations, and abandonments.
A H, Kaplan, D, Rothman
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Choosing a Psychotherapist

JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1980
To the Editor.— It appears that Nathan Schnaper, MD (242:327, 1979), thinks shopping is the key to choosing a psychotherapist. Well, I cannot say he is completely wrong, but I believe most patients have a somewhat better plan available to them. After all, a significant number of patients are referred by their internist or general practitioner, and ...
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Choosing a Psychotherapist

JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1979
THE PRACTICE of psychotherapy begs one and all to become practitioners of the art. The person (the consumer) who feels the need for help for emotional problems, where does he go and go with confidence? Selecting a competent physician involves many uncertainties; choosing a psychotherapist is a near impossibility. A surgeon may be judged by the neatness
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Psychotherapist Burnout

Journal of College Student Psychotherapy, 1998
The current study sought to determine how college students are affected by exposure to a therapist with burnout. One hundred and thirty-one undergraduate students viewed a brief video-taped therapy vignette which depicted either a therapist suffering from severe burnout, or the same therapist without burnout.
David A. Renjilian   +2 more
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Hermeneutics for Psychotherapists

American Journal of Psychotherapy, 1990
Hermeneutics as a method of approach has been used differently by many different authors, and in this paper I have reviewed the history and evolving employment of the hermeneutic approach. For the purposes of psychotherapists, the point of hermeneutics is that, in contrast to the natural sciences, it focusses away from the classical notion of the ...
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Heidegger for Psychotherapists

American Journal of Psychotherapy, 1986
"Philosophical anthropology," and a powerful continental movement in philosophy and psychology have greatly influenced the practice of psychiatry in Europe. Martin Heidegger brought this approach to a position of prominence and wide attention and I describe his views pertinent to modern psychotherapy on (a) human living and (b) the epistemological ...
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Confidentiality — The Psychotherapist's Nemesis

Nursing, Law & Ethics, 1980
This case concerns a new strand to an old yarn, the eternal triangle. It is new in that in addition to the usual cast, le mari, la femme, et l'amant (the husband, the wife, and the lover), new characters, the husband's “psychiatric team,” have been joined as parties.
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