Results 301 to 310 of about 46,584 (342)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.
Psychotherapy, 2013
A theory of the research training environment (RTE) proposed by Gelso (Counseling Psychologist, 8:7-35, 1979; Professional Psychology: Research and Practice, 24:468-476, 1993; The Counseling Psychologist, 25:307-320, 1997) is updated, and the research evidence that bears upon this theory is reviewed.
Harold Chui+3 more
openaire +3 more sources
A theory of the research training environment (RTE) proposed by Gelso (Counseling Psychologist, 8:7-35, 1979; Professional Psychology: Research and Practice, 24:468-476, 1993; The Counseling Psychologist, 25:307-320, 1997) is updated, and the research evidence that bears upon this theory is reviewed.
Harold Chui+3 more
openaire +3 more sources
Divorce and the Psychotherapist
American Journal of Psychotherapy, 1989This paper explores how divorce may affect psychotherapists' personal and professional lives. It offers theoretical speculations about the effects of divorce and makes recommendations for helping divorcing psychotherapists in their work.
openaire +3 more sources
Dependency on the Psychotherapist
Journal of Psychiatric Practice, 2010People depend on one another in most human relations, especially those involving professional services. Mental health care, and psychotherapy in particular, are characterized by various degrees of patient dependency, which can be managed to advance the purposes of diagnosis and treatment.
openaire +2 more sources
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
openaire +3 more sources
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
openaire +3 more sources
Hermeneutics for Psychotherapists
American Journal of Psychotherapy, 1990Hermeneutics 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 ...
openaire +3 more sources
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 ...
openaire +3 more sources
Psychotherapists' representations of their patients
Journal of Clinical Psychology, 2001AbstractUsing a new measure, the Patient Representation Inventory (PRI), this study investigated the nature of psychotherapists' working clinical models of their patients. The data provided by 73 therapists suggest that, regardless of experience level or theoretical orientation (cognitive‐behavioral or psychodynamic), therapists tend to evoke such ...
Adam K. Lehman+2 more
openaire +3 more sources
Meditation and the psychotherapist.
American Journal of Orthopsychiatry, 1975While meditation derives from religious traditions, it is a behavior accessible to investigation. Recent physiological and behavioral studies are surveyed, and meditation behavior is described. Greater awareness of fellings, enhanced interpersonal perception, and increased present-centeredness are behaviors transferred from meditation, and facilitative
openaire +3 more sources
The Nurse as GROUP PSYCHOTHERAPIST
AJN, American Journal of Nursing, 1958W HEN A psychiatric nurse leads a psychotherapy group, this is indeed a departure from tradition -psychiatrists and clinical psychologists are the usual ones to direct this therapy. However, the professional staff in our hospital believed there was much compatability between the nurse's customary role on a ward and the symbolic mother role she would ...
openaire +3 more sources
Confidentiality — The Psychotherapist's Nemesis
Nursing, Law & Ethics, 1980This 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.
openaire +3 more sources