170x Filetype PDF File size 0.60 MB Source: www.ifisam.be
Deutsche Gesellschaft für Psychoanalyse, Psychotherapie, Psychosomatik und Tiefenpsychologie e.V. German Society for Psychoanalysis, Psychotherapy, Psychosomatics and Depth Psychology in conjunction with the: Deutsche Gesellschaft für Analytische Psychologie (DGAP) German Society for Analytic Psychology Deutsche Gesellschaft für Individualpsychologie (DGIP) German Society for Individual Psychology Deutsche Gesellschaft für Psychotherapeutische Medizin (DGPM) German Society for Psychotherapeutic Medicine Deutsche Psychoanalytische Gesellschaft (DPG) German Psychoanalytic Society Deutsche Psychoanalytische Vereinigung (DPV) German Psychoanalytic Association Vereinigung Analytischer Kinder- und Jugendlichenpsychotherapeuten (VAKJP) Association of Analytic Child and Adolescent Psychotherapists Psychoanalytic Therapy Edited by Stephan Hau and Marianne Leuzinger-Bohleber With contributions by G. Bruns, A. Gerlach, S. Hau, P.L. Janssen, H. Kächele, F. Leichsenring, M. Leuzinger-Bohleber, W. Mertens, G. Rudolf, A.-M. Schlösser, A. Springer, U. Stuhr, E. Windaus Hamburger Sparkasse, Konto-Nr: 1282 / 121 019, BLZ 200 505 50 2 A.Gerlach: Psychoanalytic Therapy – Professional and Scientific-political Implications of the “Position Paper on Psychoanalytic Therapy” 4 Position paper on psychoanalytic therapy Preface (M. Leuzinger-Bohleber, G. Bruns) 13 Theory-of-science perspective 14 Sociology-of-science perspective 16 1. Name of the technique 24 2. Definition / short description of the technique 24 3. Techniques and forms of application 24 4. Detailed description of the forms of application of psychoanalytic therapy (W. Mertens) 26 4.1 Analytic individual therapy 26 4.2 Analytic group therapy 27 4.3 Psychodynamic/depth psychology-based individual therapy 27 4.4 Psychodynamic/depth psychology-based group therapy 28 4.5 Analytic couples and family therapy 29 4.6 Inpatient psychodynamic therapy (P.L. Janssen) 29 4.7 Analytic and psychodynamic/depth psychology-based child and adolescent therapy (individual/group) 30 5. Determining diagnosis and indication (G. Rudolf) 32 The partially structured interview 32 Diagnostic classification 34 Determining indications 35 6. State of theory development (W. Mertens) 38 Metapsychology and interdisciplinary discourse 39 Psychoanalytic disciplines 40 7. Proving the efficacy of psychoanalytic therapy 48 7.0 Clinical case studies (U. Stuhr) 48 7.1 Studies on the efficacy of psychoanalytic therapy in adults (F. Leichsenring) 59 7.2 Studies on the efficacy of psychoanalytic therapy in children and adolescents (E. Windaus) 69 7.3 Proofs of the efficacy of long-term psychoanalytic therapy under naturalistic 3 conditions (Leichsenring) 77 7.4 Descriptive process research (H. Kächele) 88 7.5 Experimental and basic science studies in the field of psychoanalysis (S. Hau) 95 8. Clinical relevance (A. Gerlach, P.L. Janssen) 102 9. Training (G. Bruns, P.L. Janssen) 106 10. Quality control (A. Springer, A.-M. Schlösser) 109 Literature 114 11. Appendix 135 Overview of studies and follow-up studies in psychoanalytic child and adolescent psychotherapy 4 Alf Gerlach Psychoanalytic Therapy – Professional and Scientific-Political Implications of the “Position Paper on Psychoanalytic Therapy” This position paper, developed by the DGPT in association with the DGAP, DGIP, DGPM, DPG, DPV and VAKJP,1 came into being in response to public demand in Germany for a new presentation of the current state of knowledge on the efficacy of psychoanalytic therapy. In this respect its publication in 2004 falls in the context of the recent changes in social and health-care policy by which old decisions are being reconsidered and their legitimacy reexamined while new legal provisions, such as the psychotherapist law in force since 1.1.1998, are transforming the discourse on health-care and science policy. Psychoanalytic therapy in particular, whose unarguable successes in patient treatment made it the first psychotherapeutic method to be integrated into the statutory health care system in Germany, must now examine and explain itself in the altered political and social landscape. At the same time, the position paper represents a statement of common understanding among psychoanalytic therapists and researchers regarding their methods and the theory of personality, disease and treatment upon which these are based. In this respect it also serves for internal clarification and discussion among specialists. It gives an overview of the present state of research on the efficacy of the various applications of psychoanalytic therapy and is intended as a contribution towards answering the question as to which problems now deserve special attention and which type of research is best suited to meet present challenges. In Germany the therapeutic applications of the psychoanalytic method have been integrated since 1967 into the statutory health care system (GKV) under the names “analytic psychotherapy” and “depth psychology-based psychotherapy.” In German- speaking regions the term “depth psychology-based psychotherapy” is used to refer to an application of the psychoanalytic method entailing “a concentration of the therapeutic process by a limitation of the treatment goal, a primarily conflict-centered approach and a restriction of regressive processes” (Psychotherapy Guidelines 1 Deutsche Gesellschaft für Psychoanalyse, Psychotherapie, Psychosomatik und Tiefenpsychologie (DGPT); Deutsche Gesellschaft für Analytische Psychologie (DGAP); Deutsche Gesellschaft für Individualpsychologie (DGIP); Deutsche Gesellschaft für Psychosomatische Medizin und Psychotherapie (DGPM); Deutsche Psychoanalytische Gesellschaft (DPG); Deutsche Psychoanalytische Vereinigung (DPV); Vereinigung Analytischer Kinder- und Jugendlichen-Psychotherapeuten (VAKJP)
no reviews yet
Please Login to review.