Literature DB >> 11678245

How treating psychoanalysts respond to psychotherapy research constraints.

F N Busch1, B L Milrod, M Rudden, T Shapiro, J Roiphe, M Singer, A Aronson.   

Abstract

The psychoanalytic community increasingly recognizes the importance of research on psychoanalytic treatments, yet a significant number of psychoanalysts continue to believe that research is either irrelevant to psychoanalysis or impossible to accomplish. Psychoanalysts who accept the value of research express concern that intrusions required by research protocols create significant distortions in the psychoanalytic process. The authors, all psychoanalysts, are studying the outcome of a brief (twenty-four-session) psychodynamic treatment of panic disorder. They report their experiences and struggles with the intrusions of videotaping, working with a treatment manual, and time-limited treatment. This research process required them to question old beliefs and to confront feelings of disloyalty toward their analytic training and identity, particularly with regard to keeping a "clean field" and routinely performing long-term analysis of character. The therapists' psychoanalytic knowledge, however, emerged as crucial for them in managing specific research constraints. Despite concerns about providing inadequate treatment, therapists were found to engage patients with psychoanalytic tools and focus in vibrant and productive therapies that led to significant improvements in panic symptoms and associated quality of life. The authors suggest that psychoanalysts have been overestimating the potential damage of research constraints on psychoanalytic process and outcome.

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Year:  2001        PMID: 11678245     DOI: 10.1177/00030651010490030601

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Am Psychoanal Assoc        ISSN: 0003-0651


  2 in total

1.  THE ONGOING STRUGGLE FOR PSYCHOANALYTIC RESEARCH: SOME STEPS FORWARD.

Authors:  Fredric N Busch; Barbara L Milrod
Journal:  Psychoanal Psychother       Date:  2010-12-01

2.  A study demonstrating efficacy of a psychoanalytic psychotherapy for panic disorder: implications for psychoanalytic research, theory, and practice.

Authors:  Fredric N Busch; Barbara L Milrod; Larry S Sandberg
Journal:  J Am Psychoanal Assoc       Date:  2009-02
  2 in total

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