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Doing Supportive Psychotherapy
Product information
Author:
Type: Paperback
ISBN: 9781615372621
Date: 30th June, 2019
Publisher: American Psychiatric Association Publishing
Categories
- Psychotherapy
Description
The author of Doing Supportive Psychotherapy set out to address a paradox:
although conducting psychotherapy is one of the most intimate and exciting
things a mental health professional can do, many textbooks on the subject are
dull, with formal, stilted dialogue between patient and therapist which prompts
the question, "Does anyone really talk like that?" This text was designed to be
different. In a dynamic, informal style, the book draws the reader in, providing
the essential building blocks that are both applicable to any mental health
discipline and compatible with any type of psychotherapy. The dozens of case
examples presented were taken from actual cases and illustrate a full range of
interactionsfrom the excellent to the seemingly ineffective: all have
instructional value. Likewise, the dialogue between therapist and patient is
conversational in a realistic way, sometimes eloquent, sometimes not. This
approach gives the reader a true sense of the scope of the therapeutic
interaction. In addition, the underlying structure of the book is logical and
easy to grasp, beginning with the evolution of supportive psychotherapy and
ending with a chapter on termination. The principles of learning to do a
psychodynamic formulation are outlined in a step-by-step fashion, making it easy
to learn, progress, and practice. The concepts and techniques explored
throughout the book are grounded in the psychotherapy literature, and
evidence-based research is cited where relevant. The book emphasizes that
psychotherapy is an inexact science, therapists are human, and the process of
therapy is a journey that is constantly changing rather than static. This
approach reassures the reader, who feels supported in a "holding environment"
while learning psychotherapy. The text is short and sweet, designed to teach
essentials and include "just enough" to get clinicians started in supportive
psychotherapy. Although the text is targeted at readers on the path toward
becoming psychotherapists (social workers, family counselors, psychologists, and
psychiatrists), those who don't conduct psychotherapy will find it an essential
tool for learning how to understand patients as well as for learning strategies
and techniques for keeping a good therapeutic alliance (which inevitably
translates into good medication compliance).
Doing Supportive
Psychotherapy is a brief, spirited book, which functions as both instructional
text and paean to psychotherapy. In vigorous, personal prose, the author leaves
readers with the message that they are not alone as they venture into the
overwhelmingly complex, perplexing, and yet totally wonderful endeavor of the
"talking cure".