We're sorry. An error has occurred
Please cancel or retry.
Psychodynamic Social Work
Some error occured while loading the Quick View. Please close the Quick View and try reloading the page.
Couldn't load pickup availability
-
27 October 2004
A comprehensive guide to psychodynamic clinical practice within a contemporary social work treatment context, this book incorporates a number of different theoretical models in tandem with more than thirty-five diverse case illustrations. Case studies are derived from an assortment of venues, including inpatient and outpatient mental health, family service, residential treatment, corrections, and private practice.
Using traditional psychoanalytic theory as a point of departure, Psychodynamic Social Work reflects the richness of current thinking in psychoanalysis and dynamic psychotherapy and addresses such important topics as
o the unique relationship between social work and psychoanalysis;
o psychosocial development and dysfunction;
o strategies for beginning therapy and establishing a relationship between therapist and client;
o understanding and using the client's transference and the therapist's countertransference to clinical advantage;
o the clinical process from dynamic assessment through termination, including client resistance to treatment as a central challenge;
o methods for treating children and adolescents;
o brief and time-limited therapy and dynamically oriented case management;
o the "focal conflict model," an instrument for analyzing a client's based on changes in speech that is used for clinical instruction as well as in single-case research and clinical supervision.
Introduction
Part I: The Psychodynamic Perspective
Enter Freud: Psychodynamic Thinking and Clinical Social Work
Psychoanalytic Theories of Development and Dysfunction: Classical Psychoanalytic Theory
Psychoanalytic Theories of Development and Dysfunction: Ego Psychology, Object Relations Theories, the Psychology of the Self, and Relational Psychoanalysis
Transference
Countertransference
Part II: The Process of Dynamic Therapy
Dynamic Assessment
Beginning Treatment: Initial Engagement, the Holding Environment, the Real Relationship, and Formation of the Therapeutic Alliance
The Middle Phase of Treatment: Resistance, Working Through, and Dynamic Technique
Termination: The Endgame
Part III: Special Clinical Populations and Adaptations of the Psychodynamic Approach
Children
Adolescents
The Meter's Running: Dynamic Approaches to Brief and Time-Limited Therapy
Psychodynamic Case Management, by Jerry E. Floersch and Jeffrey L. Longhofer
Part IV:Research on Dynamic Treatment
Research on Clinical Process and Outcomes in Psychodynamic Therapy and Psychoanalysis
Notes
Select Glossary of Psychoanalytic Terms and Concepts
References