Results 161 to 170 of about 12,544,309 (215)
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Nondisclosure in psychotherapy group supervision: The supervisee perspective
, 2009The aim of this study was to investigate aspects of nondisclosure in a sample of 55 student therapists, working within a group format of supervision. The study constituted one part of a larger study, with the other, parallel part addressing nondisclosure
S. Reichelt+7 more
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Aging & Mental Health, 2006
This paper forms part of the second phase of a project looking at those changes that occurred for participants during a series of time-limited psychotherapy groups for people with dementia.
R. Watkins+3 more
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This paper forms part of the second phase of a project looking at those changes that occurred for participants during a series of time-limited psychotherapy groups for people with dementia.
R. Watkins+3 more
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An Investigation of Conceptual Process and Pattern Change in a Psychotherapy Group
British Journal of Psychiatry, 1971In a review of the 1967 group psychotherapy literature, MacLennan and Levy (1968) record that nearly 300 papers were published in that one year. Unfortunately, this proliferation does not reflect any great increase in the knowledge of group psychotherapy
F. Fransella, M. Joyston-Bechal
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The natural history of a psychotherapy group for battered women.
Psychiatry, 1979This paper presents the authors' experience with evaluation and treatment of battered women and assesses the implications of the work. Assuming that battered women have special problems requiring modifications of psychiatric treatment methods currently ...
Bruce J. Rounsaville+2 more
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GROUP PSYCHOTHERAPY WITH ALCOHOLICS*
British Journal of Addiction to Alcohol & Other Drugs, 1961While the more complex aspects of the alcoholic's difficulties should be dealt with in individual psychotherapy, group psychotherapy can be of great help as a means of altering behaviour. The members of a group may have their own particular problems, nevertheless they do have one major problem in common, the alcohol problem.
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Phases of Development in the Systems-Centered™ Psychotherapy Group
, 1999The systems-centered approach to group psychotherapy systematically weakens the restraining forces at the boundaries of each subphase and phase of group development, so that the inherent system drive toward therapeutic development and transformation will
Y. Agazarian
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Psychotherapy Research, 2015
This study investigated whether routine monitoring of client progress, often called “client feedback,” via an abbreviated version of the Partners for Change Outcome Management System (PCOMS) resulted in improved outcomes for soldiers receiving group ...
Donald L. Schuman+3 more
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This study investigated whether routine monitoring of client progress, often called “client feedback,” via an abbreviated version of the Partners for Change Outcome Management System (PCOMS) resulted in improved outcomes for soldiers receiving group ...
Donald L. Schuman+3 more
semanticscholar +1 more source
Group Psychotherapy Interminable
International Journal of Group Psychotherapy, 1970(1970). Group Psychotherapy Interminable. International Journal of Group Psychotherapy: Vol. 20, No. 2, pp. 219-223.
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Antidepressants in Group Psychotherapy
International Journal of Group Psychotherapy, 1991This article alerts us to consider depression as a relatively frequent cause of impasse in the course of group psychotherapy. The authors recommend the combined use of antidepressant medication along with group psychotherapy when such depression is confirmed independently outside the group.
Russell Joffe, John T. Salvendy
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An Existential Group Psychotherapy
International Journal of Group Psychotherapy, 1979(1979). An Existential Group Psychotherapy. International Journal of Group Psychotherapy: Vol. 29, No. 2, pp. 163-174.
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