Psychodynamic Family Therapy
Psychoanalysis is a therapeutic approach preferred by followers of the Freudian school of thought (circa 1900 s) that sees clients as psychologically ill through unconscious conflict within the mind. Freud based his approach on individual clinical case studies, which fail to be empirically tested due to the impossibility of replication. This means that the treatment of clients is an act of faith based on experience of individual therapists own experience.
The conflict that Freud wrote of was the mind s ability to protect itself from harm by creating strategies that Freud named defence mechanisms. These mechanisms prevent conscious awareness of traumatic experience from the past in childhood that could cause distress to the client. These defence mechanisms often displayed
...in straitjackets and carted off to the nearest asylum. Many of those very same people are unaware that bipolar disease is one of the most common mental illnesses in the United States, and can range from mild to severe symptoms, ...
Freud believed that through the technique of free-association a patient could reinact mentally the past traumas and so through insight could come to terms with the past event. This meant that the client would be free of the syptomolgy and change their behaviour to more suitable strategies for coping with stress.
Freud s original ideas where based on his theory of child development that led to a model of the mind in which the person s mental processes where divided into three parts. The first to develop was the ID ; Freud saw this
...diminished ability to think or concentrate and recurrent thoughts of death. The symptoms can cause significant distress or impairment in social and occupational functioning. The depressed person may have difficulty in crying, have countless unprovoked crying spells or he may ...
...was administered without anaesthesia or muscle relaxants. Patients were frequently injured as a side effect of the induced seizure. ECT has been commonly misused in the past, sometimes as a punishment for patients hospitalized in mental institutions. ECT was sometimes ...
Since Freud s death in 1939 the neo-Freudians have modified his methods and differing schools of thought have honed and developed psychoanalysis in many different directions. This has meant that modern psychoanalysis may present itself
...Only if you try to do something to improve this world where you and billions of people like you live in suffering, will you feel better and only then will your life have a positive meaning. This way, you will ...
It is impossible to explore all the differing types of psychoanalysis in this short essay however on of the most influential and clinically acceptable styles is that
...child falling a victim to the disorder is 15% to 30%. If both parents have the illness, the risk rises to 50% to 75%. Bipolar disorders in children are usually treated with medicines such as mood stabilizers in combination with ...
In all psychoanalytical therapy it is primarily aimed at the individual and the individuals problems of behaviour and ability to cope in the present environment. The success of
...differ depending on the types of drugs used. Common side effects include nausea, tremors, hair loss, sexual problems, and weight gain. It is hard to find a bipolar disorder medicine that works for everyone in the same way. Patients have ...
From individual therapy
...their mouth. 11 When the ear heard, then it blessed me, And when the eye saw, then it approved me; 12 Because I delivered the poor who cried out, The fatherless and the one who had no helper. 13 The ...
Family therapy is not based on any particular personality theory or school of thought. In itself it is an approach to problems in that the family is viewed as the patient and all
...structures or brain function. Diagnostic methods include physical examination, checking medical history, detailed questioning, and psychological testing. It will call for an assessment of a complete history of symptoms, a mental status examination to determine if speech, thought patterns or ...
Unlike individual therapy Family therapy looks initially for the family power structure and improving communications and understanding between the members of the family. Most therapist try to increase individual understanding of each other and the ability for each member of the family to grow and be accepting of differentiation. Most families start of by scapegoating a particular member of the family as the central cause of the upsets and disharmony within the unit. R. D. Laing and Esterson (1964) discovered through their research into
...in an attempt to catch up a missed dose. Seroquel can interact with other medications and herbal remedies and supplements, so it is important to report all herbal, OTC, and prescribed medications to the patient's doctor. Seroquel can also cause ...
Family therapy developed from the work of Ludwig von Bertalanffy (1956) from his theory of General Systems. This sees man as autonomous, creative organism living in an open system i.e. the family. Behaviour is regulated by the family and is seen in Gestalt terms as being part of a whole system of which the individual is but a
...around your workplace, school or collage You can be inventive and create your own designs or you could download the poster from depressionalliance.org (available from beginning of march). Either way you will be providing awareness of depression and National Depression ...
Unlike psychoanalysis, family therapy often involves two therapists. One acts as mediator between the members and initiates subject discussion and guidance, while the other acts as an observer. It is very difficult to note everything that is going on in body language and asides when four or more family members are all speaking and trying
...or intrusive. Decreased need for sleep - Feeling rested after just a few hours of sleep. More talkative than usual - Extremely talkative and sociable; pressure to keep talking. Racing thoughts - Flight of ideas; can't keep up with your ...
One particular theory of family therapy was proposed by George Kelly (1955) called Personal Construct Theory. Kelly believed that a people are constantly changing and developing and that to understand someone we have to try and find out how that person makes sense of the world. Kelly believed that
...yourself if your feelings become overwhelming. It s normal to feel resentful and angry that your personal life and family life are being so radically impacted by your mate s depression. You may feel that the person you once knew ...
...case patients should not give up on the medicine. On the other hand patients should also not leave the medication too soon when they see the symptoms disappearing and take proper medical advise before leaving the treatment and make sure ...
From Kelly s and others work it is possible in both psychoanalysis and family therapy to see alliances, dyads and triads within the family system. Alliances explain conflict when for example father and mother allow the son to stay out late but not the daughter. A dyad exists between the father and mother against the daughter and a triad if the son also agrees with the parents. However these dynamics can change. Mother may sympathise with the daughter s plights and may have an alliance between the daughter against the Father s wishes. The son may align himself to the daughter against the
...minerals, amino acids and enzymes, herbal extracts and specialty supplements to restore brain balance and functioning in a manner similar to using [http://www.beat-your-depression.com/depression_medicine.html]Trazodone for depression and its troubling symptoms. Ingredients are scientifically formulated, in combination, to provide crucial nutritional, chemical, ...
The effect of both psychoanalysis and family therapy are not diametrically opposed but act as complimentary to each other as a form of support depending on the needs of the client and their presenting problems. The therapist in both situations needs to be aware of their limitations in the work to be achieved and the goals set by both the individual and family members. Both methods require a high level of theoretical understanding and the ability to be flexible in the approach taken. Critically the therapist should always remember to clearly
...saying that Yoga POSES alone will be the end all be all of your depression. No. Poses alone DO NOT constitute Yoga. Breathing exercises (known as pranayama), Meditation, (which could be rooted in your religious or spiritual beliefs) and a ...
A relationship of trust has to be achieved in therapy and this is doubly hard to do when confronted by hostile family members who may feel intimidated by being in therapy in the first place. Being able to integrate with one person through empathy is a skill needed by the therapist and in family therapy this means of course trying to empathise with four or more people without appearing bias to one member over another. The danger of transference exists at a more complex level in the family therapy. The therapist may be seen as a threat to parental
...work. It could also be used when the disorder is more severe leading to suicidal tendencies. Conclusion There is nothing to fear if you are affected with the disorder. All you need is speaking to the physician next door, taking ...
Much modern therapy is of course short-term in duration and in itself creates problems. Economically all therapy can be expensive and therapist should be aware of the economic conflicts involved, even to the point of the family blaming one member for the expense of therapy. By its very nature therapy can in many instances only guide the individual or family on to the path of resolution and so should concentrate on those skills needed by the clients to achieve this goal as early as possible during
...with clients, other associations and institutions. Client records and information must be guarded in strict confidentiality and not discussed with anyone. A breach of confidentiality can lead to a LPC losing their license and jeopardize the mental health and well-being ...
What ever method the therapist uses or the client responds too both psychoanalysis, in its many forms and family therapy can help to resolve conscious and unconscious conflict.
References:
Berne, E (1964) Games People Play, Pgs. 1/37
Berne, E (1970) Sex in Human Loving, Pgs93/96
Kennedy, E (1973) On Becoming a
...designed to take away the solutions that you already have, many of which are probably very effective. Instead, DBT can help you find more and possibly better ways of solving problems than what you are doing right now, especially if ...
Bion, W.R. (1961) Experiences in Groups Pg 11
Fromm, E. (1973) The Anatomy of Human Destructiveness Pg 291
Rycroft, C (1985) Psychoanalysis and Behaviour Pgs 58, 128, 147.
Mitchell, J (1986) The Selected Melanie Klein Pgs57, 84.
Laing, RD & Esterson, A (1964) Sanity, Madness and the Family Pgs 1/15
Christensen/Wagner/Halliday (2001) Instant Notes Psychology Pgs.236
REA s Problem Solver in Psychology Pgs600/601
Thompson. B (1984) Unit 8 Social Psychology D307 Open University Pgs9-19
Dr. Stephen Myler is from Leicester in England, an industrial town in the Midlands of the United Kingdom. He holds a B.Sc (Honours) in Psychology from the UK s Open University the largest in the UK; he also has an M.Sc and
...through such extreme mood swings, it can be very difficult for the person suffering and those around them to take the depressive state and recognize it for its seriousness. Living with manic depression requires very careful management. While there is ...
...this mental illness. Research studies into treatment are dedicated to improving treatments for bipolar disorder. Many patients can be cured using currently available treatments. However, many important challenges remain. Some drugs work well for years and then slowly lose their ...













