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Psychodynamic Psychotherapy Research. Evidence-Based Practice and Practice-Based Evidence (Current Clinical Psychiatry)
Levy, R. — Ablon, S. — Kächele, H.
1ª Edición Enero 2012
Inglés
Tapa dura
350 pags
1403 gr
18 x 26 x 4 cm
ISBN 9781607617914
Editorial HUMANA PRESS
LIBRO IMPRESO
-5%
259,99 €246,99 €IVA incluido
249,99 €237,49 €IVA no incluido
Recíbelo en un plazo de
2 - 3 semanas
Before the 1960s, psychoanalysis and psychodynamic psychotherapy were the dominant modes of treatment within psychiatry. These treatments have faced increasing scrutiny and skepticism as the movement towards evidence-based treatments has intensified and the mental health field has been asked to treat increasingly ill and severely character-disordered patients. Psychodynamic psychotherapy has lost status within the mental health field as other forms of treatment have developed a strong and well-funded research base. At the same time, the exciting bursts of knowledge about the functioning of the brain and the subsequent development of psychopharmacologic treatments have added to treatment alternatives. This development has served to help patients but also to decrease the frequency with which dynamic treatments are indicated. Criticisms of psychoanalytic treatments, which are grounded in elaborate theories of the mind that have been evolving since the late 19th century, have been valid to the extent that a scientific basis for the work was missing. Recently, however, there has been an explosion in empirical research on psychoanalytic theories and treatments. There have been more than 70 randomized controlled trials of psychodynamic psychotherapy and psychoanalysis, and much more research supporting psychodynamic principles and specific psychodynamic treatments for many diagnostic categories. In this volume of Psychodynamic Psychotherapy Research: Evidence-Based Practice and Practice-Based Evidence we demonstrate the relevance of and scientific support for psychodynamic treatment across a wide range of diagnostic categories and treatment strategies. One of the difficulties in the field of psychodynamic psychotherapy is that researchers and clinicians have not embraced one another. Clinicians have felt that researchers are ivory tower academics not on the front lines of clinical care, and researchers have felt that clinicians have little appreciation for the value of empirical research or the evidence that certain treatment principles are more effective with specific diagnostic populations. This volume presents the integration of clinical work and research through the scientist-practitioner model. Almost every author who has committed to write a chapter is an active clinician-researcher. The chapters and researchers we have selected all emphasize the relevance of their studies for clinical work by including clinical vignettes with discussion of the influence of their research on treatment. We have asked authors to keep this integrative principle in mind throughout their chapters. Once again, there is a section on Efficacy and Effectiveness Studies. Within this section, there are three chapters that review evidence-based psychodynamic treatments including long-term psychotherapy and treatments for depression and anxiety disorders. In addition, there is a section on the role of the single case study in psychodynamic psychotherapy and psychoanalysis, and once again, there is a section on diagnostic and outcome measures particularly relevant to studying psychodynamic psychotherapy. In this second volume, we also plan to include an expanded section on Neurobiology and Psychotherapy and have proposed six potential chapters. Modern psychiatry reflects the advances in neuroimaging technology, and research findings using this method, which will be highlighted in this section, are particularly powerful in the field at this point in time. Finally, there is a section in which eminent psychodynamic psychotherapy researchers will write their thoughts about the value of psychotherapy research over time for clinical work. They respond to the question, "What have we learned from psychodynamic psychotherapy research that has proven to be clinically useful?"
Content Level » Professional/practitioner
Keywords » Anxiety Disorders - Attachment Theory - Borderline Personality Disorder - Defense Interpretation - Depression - Individual Psychodynamic Psychotherapy - Personality Organization - Psychoanalytic - Psychodynamic Psychotherapy - Structured Interviews - Transference-Focused Psychotherapy
Related subjects » Neurology - Psychiatry - Psychology
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Efficacy and Effectiveness Studies of Psychodynamic Psychotherapy
Reviews
1) Empirical Studies of Long-Term Psychodynamic Psychotherapy Treatments for
Multiple Disorders
Falk Leichsenring, DSc, Sven Rabung, PhD
2) Psychoanalytic and Psychodynamic Therapies for Depression: The Evidence
Base
David Taylor, PhD
3) A Review of Evidence-Based Psychodynamic Treatments for Anxiety Disorders
Jenelle M. Slavin, M.A. & Mark J. Hilsenroth, PhD
Original Reports
4) Attachment Theory and Psychotherapy: Implications for Psychodynamic Treatments
Ken Levy, PhD & Lori Scott, PhD
5) An Empirical Approach to Defense Interpretation and Assessment with Multiple
Diagnoses
J. Christopher Perry, PhD & Stephen M. Beck, PhD
6) Transference-Focused Psychotherapy for Borderline Personality Disorder—Process
of Supportive v. Expressive Treatments Using the Psychotherapy Process Q-set
Rachel Wasserman, MA & Kenneth Levy, PhD
7) Empirical Evidence for Transference-Focused Psychotherapy for Borderline
Personality Disorder—An Update
Ken Levy, PhD, Rachel Wasserman, MA, Lori Scott, PhD, Frank Yeomans, PhD
8) Process Variables Influencing Positive Outcome in Psychotherapy
Sidney Blatt, PhD
Studying Individual Psychodynamic Psychotherapy:
The Single Case Study
9) From Psychoanalytic Narrative to Empirical Single Case Research—A
New Paradigm: The German Specimen Case of Amalia X
Horst Kaechele, MD, Joseph Schachter, MD, Helmut Thoma, MD
10) The Single Case Study in Psychotherapy--How Does Psychotherapy Work? Two
Examples
Raymond Levy, PsyD, J. Stuart Ablon, PhD, Nnamdi Pole, PhD, Tai Katzenstein,
PhD, Julie Ackerman, MA
11) Tai Katzenstein, PhD, Nnamdi Pole, PhD, J. Stuart Ablon, PhD,
Raymond A. Levy, PsyD(???)
Empirical Measures of Outcome for Psychodynamic Psychotherapy
12) A Review of Outcomes Measures for Psychodynamic Psychotherapy and Psychoanalysis
Caleb Siefert, PhD, Jared Defife, PhD
13) The Structured Interview for Personality Organization—A Developmental
Psychoanalytic Diagnostic Measure
Susanne Hoerz, Dipl.-Psych., John Clarkin, PhD, Barry Stern,
PhD, Eve Caligor, MD
Neurobiology and Psychotherapy
14) Neuroimaging Findings in a Case of Short-term Psychodynamic Psychotherapy:
a CCRT Approach
Josh Roffman, MD, Janet Witte, MD, Pat Giulino, LICSW, Raymond Levy, PsyD, Ira
Lable, MD
15) Neural Models of Psychodynamic Concepts and Treatments— An Update
Andrew Gerber, MD, Josh Roffman, MD
16) Psychoanalytic Concepts: Preliminary Neuroimaging Findings
Bernard Beitman, MD, George Viacontes, MD
17) Unconscious Mental Processes and Priming: Neuroimaging Findings
Philip Wong, PhD
18) Commentary on Neuroimaging Findings and Psychoanalysis—
Mark Solms, PhD
19) Historical Reports: What Have We Learned from Psychodynamic Psychotherapy
Research that is Relevant to Treatment?
Sid Blatt, PhD, Morris Eagle, PhD, Mark Hilsenroth, PhD, Paul Wachtel, PhD,
Jacques Barber, PhD
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