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Showing 1 to 15 of 303 results Save | Export
Truax, Charles B.; Lister, James L. – J Clin Psychol, 1970
Descriptors: Group Therapy, Psychotherapy, Therapists
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Pies, Ronald – Journal of Poetry Therapy, 1988
Suggests that the poet and the psychotherapist begin with different motivations and address quite different tasks. Discusses the paradox embodied in poetry therapy. (SR)
Descriptors: Poetry, Poets, Psychotherapy, Therapists
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Rosenthal, Vin – Journal of Poetry Therapy, 1991
Relates the personal and spiritual journey of a psychotherapist who has given up writing haiku as a way of being in the world and has found that a question (on the nature of the Natural Self and learning to find one's next step) has taken the place of haiku in his life. (SR)
Descriptors: Haiku, Individual Psychology, Psychotherapy, Therapists
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Atkinson, Donald R.; Kozitza, Linda Pepper – Journal of Counseling and Development, 1988
Examined ability of 40 psychotherapists to diagnose premenstrual syndrome (PMS). Developed two case vignettes identical except for symptoms being cyclical in one and noncyclical in other. Psychotherapists made diagnosis and selected treatment. Most respondents could distinguish PMS from non-PMS case on cyclical versus noncyclical feature.…
Descriptors: Clinical Diagnosis, Evaluation Criteria, Psychotherapy, Therapists
Howard, Kenneth I.; And Others – J Counseling Psychol, 1970
Little relationship was found between measures of therapist orientation and patient experience for the total sample. However, when patients were separated into more homogeneous diagnostic groups, some significant relationships emerged. The element of therapist orientation which had most impact on patient experience was therapists' acknowledgement…
Descriptors: Individual Psychology, Patients, Philosophy, Psychotherapy
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Greifinger, Joel – Communication Review, 1995
States that psychoanalytic therapy is a conversation about the "good life" with particular moral aims. Argues that the analyst attempts to convince the analysand of the advantages of being a decentered social-constructivist who broadens her realm of self-acknowledgement and enriches her moral vocabulary. Concludes that this advocacy of…
Descriptors: Physician Patient Relationship, Psychiatry, Psychotherapy, Therapists
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Coche, Erich; Polikoff, Barbara – Group: The Journal of the Eastern Group Psychotherapy Society, 1979
Explores whether self-disclosure in group psychotherapy produces better group outcome. Although the expected positive relationship between the two variables was found, results also indicate a need for caution in postulating a link between self-disclosure and improvement. (BP)
Descriptors: Disclosure, Group Therapy, Interpersonal Relationship, Psychotherapy
Meredith, Nikki – Science 86, 1986
The demand for therapy has increased 400 percent in the past three decades, noting that about 250 different therapies treat the one syndrome shared by all patients, namely, demoralization. Whether such therapies really work is the subject of this report. (JN)
Descriptors: Behavior Modification, Psychiatrists, Psychologists, Psychotherapy
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Beutler, Larry E.; And Others – Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 1972
The results were interpreted as demonstrating a relationship between the findings of two independent lines of research on therapy outcome, one basing outcome predictions on client-centered theoretical constructs, the other on the empirical value of the A-B scale. (Author)
Descriptors: Empathy, Psychological Patterns, Psychotherapy, Schizophrenia
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Schofield, William – Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 1971
Psychologists appear no less reticient than psychiatrists toward public revelation of their "money behavior." It is suggested that some of the reticence may reflect shame over the sale of friendship. The impact of comprehensive health insurance is noted. (Author)
Descriptors: Ethics, Fees, Health Insurance, Psychologists
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Gradlin, Walter – Group: The Journal of the Eastern Group Psychotherapy Society, 1979
Conjoint therapy requires reciprocal respect of the two therapists as well as each therapist's fidelity to his/her own treatment plan. The patients' difficulties in shifting between group and individual treatment are discussed. A review of the literature and case studies are presented. (BEF)
Descriptors: Cocounseling, Group Therapy, Patients, Psychotherapy
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Corrie, Sarah – Journal of Poetry Therapy, 1999
Examines the four existential realities of isolation, meaninglessness, death, and freedom as a framework for understanding Dante's "Divine Comedy." Argues that studying this text and its metaphors offers an enriched understanding of the dilemmas of human existence which can refine the understanding of the therapeutic relationship.…
Descriptors: Existentialism, Medieval Literature, Metaphors, Poetry
Farber, Barry A. – 1988
Burnout among psychotherapists appears to be low; most psychotherapists seem quite satisfied with their work and untouched by the dysfunctional symptoms of burnout. Interviews with 60 therapists revealed that most considered "lack of therapeutic success" to be the single most stressful aspect of therapeutic work. Burnout was most often attributed…
Descriptors: Burnout, Incidence, Psychotherapy, Stress Variables
Gornick, Lisa K. – 1984
There is little attention in the literature to the dyad of the woman therapist and the man patient; as a result, the woman therapist is faced with a poverty of theoretical accounts upon which she can draw in her clinical work. Although analytically-oriented work must focus on individual histories rather than cultural internalizations, analysis of…
Descriptors: Females, Individual Power, Males, Psychotherapy
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Chartier, George M. – Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 1974
Clinical studies suggest that A and B therapist "types" may be associated with variation in the process and outcome of psychotherapy. Because of the proliferation of A-B scales, this study attempts to replicate and clarify several scale versions in order to justify their use in future studies. (Author/PC)
Descriptors: Classification, Psychology, Psychotherapy, Research Projects
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