Verhandeln der therapeutischen Allianz: Beziehungsbehandlung Safran Muran NEU-

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Negotiating the Therapeutic Alliance: Relational Treatment Safran Muran NEW
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Artikelzustand
Neu: Neues, ungelesenes, ungebrauchtes Buch in makellosem Zustand ohne fehlende oder beschädigte ...
ISBN
9781572305120
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Product Identifiers

Publisher
Guilford Publications
ISBN-10
1572305126
ISBN-13
9781572305120
eBay Product ID (ePID)
1628341

Product Key Features

Number of Pages
260 Pages
Language
English
Publication Name
Negotiating the Therapeutic Alliance : a Relational Treatment Guide
Subject
Social Work, Psychotherapy / General, Psychiatry / General
Publication Year
2000
Type
Textbook
Subject Area
Social Science, Psychology, Medical
Author
J. Christopher Muran, Jeremy D. Safran
Format
Hardcover

Dimensions

Item Height
1 in
Item Weight
20 Oz
Item Length
9.4 in
Item Width
6.4 in

Additional Product Features

Intended Audience
Scholarly & Professional
LCCN
99-057055
Dewey Edition
21
Reviews
"The quality of the therapeutic alliance is the most powerful predictor of success in psychotherapy. Given the inevitability of stresses, strains, and breakdowns in that alliance, the identification and repair of these difficulties are among the most important skills for the psychotherapist to acquire....[This book] belongs in the library of every mental health professional who practices or teaches psychotherapy."--American Journal of Psychiatry, "While clinical research has demonstrated the efficacy of a variety of psychotherapeutic procedures, what is often overlooked is the critical role played by the 'common factors' of psychotherapy. This important book details procedures for optimizing the therapeutic alliance and maximizing treatment effectiveness. It should be read by all clinicians." --David H. Barlow, PhD, Professor and Director Center for Anxiety and Related Disorders, Boston University "This is a splendid book, expertly written by two exceptionally creative psychotherapy theorists and researchers. Its strength lies in drawing out the implications for practice of the relational perspective, and doing so in both a scholarly and practical way. It is broad and integrative, bringing together psychoanalytic and experiential perspectives as well as Western and Eastern outlooks. The clinical vignettes are excellent, as is the coverage of procedures for teaching and training. All therapists will benefit enormously from learning about this exciting and powerful approach." --Stanley B. Messer, PhD, Professor and Chair, Department of Clinical Psychology, Graduate School of Applied and Professional Psychology, Rutgers University "A remarkable achievement. This masterfully crafted guide to relational psychotherapy is one of only a handful of books that have bridged the chasm between empirical research and improvements in psychotherapeutic technique. It represents one of the few genuine advances in psychotherapeutic technique over the last quarter-century. Focusing on the difficult-to-engage patient, the authors provide a wise, detailed, and comprehensive guide to effective psychotherapy intervention which always remains firmly grounded in theory and research. All therapists, novices and experts, will improve the quality and effectiveness of their work having read this book." --Peter Fonagy PhD, Freud Memorial Professor of Psychoanalysis, University of London "This forward-looking book documents significant changes in psychodynamic theory and practice as relational thinking is superseding the classical drive model. The emphasis on therapist training and clinical illustrations is particularly helpful." --Hans H. Strupp, PhD, Distinguished Professor of Psychology, Emeritus, Vanderbilt University "This book is an unparalleled achievement that transcends many of the usual dichotomies in the field. Structured as a treatment manual, the book elaborates detailed interventions and techniques, but it is also personal and experiential, emphasizing procedural knowledge, self-awareness, and reflection-in-action. It is among the few comprehensive texts that truly integrates ongoing empirical research with cutting-edge developments in clinical psychoanalysis, as well as elements of other therapeutic modalities. It outlines broad theoretical and philosophical principles, yet at the same time provides clear-cut intervention strategies, illustrated with lively and meaningful clinical material. On top of all this it is clearly and engagingly written, well organized, and even includes a creative chapter on the largely unexamined area of training issues and supervision. This book will be used both as a classroom text and as a sourcebook for working clinicians, researchers, and theorists." --Lewis Aron, PhD, Director, Postdoctoral Program in Psychotherapy and Psychoanalysis, New York University "This is a brilliant book. Informed by the authors' internationally recognized research program on ruptures in the therapeutic alliance, the book is enlightening in two major ways. First, its focus on ruptures opens a route to understanding the nature and utility of the therapeutic alliance. Second, the authors show how to negotiate ruptures, offering a veritable guide to moving from rupture to healing. Focusing on an important and neglected area of clinical training, this is an invaluable text for beginning and advanced psychotherapy courses." --Lester Lu, "This excellent text more than fulfills the promise of the title; it is a welcome addition to the general literature of psychotherapy....The chapters flow naturally from one to the other, and the ideas presented are well integrated and form a coherent whole....I recommend it warmly to all psychotherapists, whatever their discipline; it is written from a psychodynamic point of view but could be read with advantage by therapists using nondynamic approaches. The authors are obviously very competent on the subject."--Canadian Journal of Psychiatry "Negotiating the Therapeutic Alliance is a good book. The authors come to the task of writing this book from rich backgrounds....I find much to praise in these pages. First, the book gives credence and function to the therapeutic alliance as a vital component of the therapeutic relation and interaction. In the face of oppositional counter-currents prevailing in many corners of the psychotherapeutic empire, particularly those using concepts of transference and countertransference to cover all aspects of the therapeutic relation, the acknowledgment and effort to work with the therapeutic alliance, as an element in therapy different and distinct from transference, countertransference, or both is praiseworthy. Second the coverage is comprehensive and detailed, discussing many important aspects of this complex and difficult subject. Third, the theoretical discussions are complemented by copious clinical vignettes that serve to illuminate the material under discussion, adding a practical and useful dimension to the discussion. Fourth, I approach this book as a clinical psychoanalyst with many years of experience. My reading found nothing in the discussion of clinical material that was not immediately familiar to me as an analyst, and nothing that was not comfortably congruent with my own understanding of and utilization of the analytic method. The suggestions and recommendations for reconstituting the therapeutic alliance are resonant with my own experience and I have found similar recommendations in my own efforts to deal with these issues (Meissner, 1996)....an excellent introduction to some aspects of the therapeutic alliance and should serve psychotherapists, particularly those learning the trade who are being confronted with difficult patients and difficult situations of disruption of the alliance and therapeutic impasses, and are looking for a helping hand."--Contemporary Psychology "Beginning psychotherapists, psychotherapists who struggle in their work with patients with characterological issues, and psychotherapists trying to adapt their techniques to fit the demands of shorter treatment periods are likely to find this book useful....their practical and well-founded approach may lead readers to feel rejuvenated about how to approach difficult moments in treatment."--Bulletin of the Menninger Clinic "One of [this book's] major strengths is the richness and abundance of clinical material. The numerous vignettes reflect the complexities and imperfections of real live therapeutic process and beautifully illustrate in action the very ideas and principles the authors propose. Explicit, detailed, and alive in the writing, the clinical vignettes breathe off the page. Safran and Muran write with the authority of long clinical experience. These are therapists who have been in the trenches of intensive psychotherapy, who have banged their heads against many walls and know from the gut just how lousy it feels to be stuck. They have thought about these matters deeply and the reader benefits from their experience....Safran and Muran have made a substantial and original contribution to the field, accomplishing what they set out to do: providing a theoretical rationale for the therapeutic alliance and providing a treasure trove of highly specific tools of both attitude and action (stance and technique). If these insights are incorporated, "This excellent text more than fulfills the promise of the title; it is a welcome addition to the general literature of psychotherapy....The chapters flow naturally from one to the other, and the ideas presented are well integrated and form a coherent whole....I recommend it warmly to all psychotherapists, whatever their discipline; it is written from a psychodynamic point of view but could be read with advantage by therapists using nondynamic approaches. The authors are obviously very competent on the subject."--Canadian Journal of Psychiatry "Negotiating the Therapeutic Allianceis a good book. The authors come to the task of writing this book from rich backgrounds....I find much to praise in these pages. First, the book gives credence and function to the therapeutic alliance as a vital component of the therapeutic relation and interaction. In the face of oppositional counter-currents prevailing in many corners of the psychotherapeutic empire, particularly those using concepts of transference and countertransference to cover all aspects of the therapeutic relation, the acknowledgment and effort to work with the therapeutic alliance, as an element in therapy different and distinct from transference, countertransference, or both is praiseworthy. Second the coverage is comprehensive and detailed, discussing many important aspects of this complex and difficult subject. Third, the theoretical discussions are complemented by copious clinical vignettes that serve to illuminate the material under discussion, adding a practical and useful dimension to the discussion. Fourth, I approach this book as a clinical psychoanalyst with many years of experience. My reading found nothing in the discussion of clinical material that was not immediately familiar to me as an analyst, and nothing that was not comfortably congruent with my own understanding of and utilization of the analytic method. The suggestions and recommendations for reconstituting the therapeutic alliance are resonant with my own experience and I have found similar recommendations in my own efforts to deal with these issues (Meissner, 1996)....an excellent introduction to some aspects of the therapeutic alliance and should serve psychotherapists, particularly those learning the trade who are being confronted with difficult patients and difficult situations of disruption of the alliance and therapeutic impasses, and are looking for a helping hand."--Contemporary Psychology "Beginning psychotherapists, psychotherapists who struggle in their work with patients with characterological issues, and psychotherapists trying to adapt their techniques to fit the demands of shorter treatment periods are likely to find this book useful....their practical and well-founded approach may lead readers to feel rejuvenated about how to approach difficult moments in treatment."--Bulletin of the Menninger Clinic "One of [this book's] major strengths is the richness and abundance of clinical material. The numerous vignettes reflect the complexities and imperfections of real live therapeutic process and beautifully illustrate in action the very ideas and principles the authors propose. Explicit, detailed, and alive in the writing, the clinical vignettes breathe off the page. Safran and Muran write with the authority of long clinical experience. These are therapists who have been in the trenches of intensive psychotherapy, who have banged their heads against many walls and know from the gut just how lousy it feels to be stuck. They have thought about these matters deeply and the reader benefits from their experience....Safran and Muran have made a substantial and original contribution to the field, accomplishing what they set out to do: providing a theoretical rationale for the therapeutic alliance and providing a treasure trove of highly specific tools of both attitude and action (stance and technique). If these insights are incorpor, 'While clinical research has demonstrated the efficacy of a variety of psychotherapeutic procedures, what is often overlooked is the critical role played by the 'common factors' of psychotherapy. This important book details procedures for optimizing the therapeutic alliance and maximizing treatment effectiveness. It should be read by all clinicians.'- David H. Barlow, PhD, Professor and Director Center for Anxiety and Related Disorders, Boston University  , The quality of the therapeutic alliance is the most powerful predictor of success in psychotherapy. Given the inevitability of stresses, strains, and breakdowns in that alliance, the identification and repair of these difficulties are among the most important skills for the psychotherapist to acquire....[This book] belongs in the library of every mental health professional who practices or teaches psychotherapy., "While clinical research has demonstrated the efficacy of a variety of psychotherapeutic procedures, what is often overlooked is the critical role played by the 'common factors' of psychotherapy. This important book details procedures for optimizing the therapeutic alliance and maximizing treatment effectiveness. It should be read by all clinicians." --David H. Barlow, PhD, Professor and Director Center for Anxiety and Related Disorders, Boston University "This is a splendid book, expertly written by two exceptionally creative psychotherapy theorists and researchers. Its strength lies in drawing out the implications for practice of the relational perspective, and doing so in both a scholarly and practical way. It is broad and integrative, bringing together psychoanalytic and experiential perspectives as well as Western and Eastern outlooks. The clinical vignettes are excellent, as is the coverage of procedures for teaching and training. All therapists will benefit enormously from learning about this exciting and powerful approach." --Stanley B. Messer, PhD, Professor and Chair, Department of Clinical Psychology, Graduate School of Applied and Professional Psychology, Rutgers University "A remarkable achievement. This masterfully crafted guide to relational psychotherapy is one of only a handful of books that have bridged the chasm between empirical research and improvements in psychotherapeutic technique. It represents one of the few genuine advances in psychotherapeutic technique over the last quarter-century. Focusing on the difficult-to-engage patient, the authors provide a wise, detailed, and comprehensive guide to effective psychotherapy intervention which always remains firmly grounded in theory and research. All therapists, novices and experts, will improve the quality and effectiveness of their work having read this book." --Peter Fonagy PhD, Freud Memorial Professor of Psychoanalysis, University of London "This forward-looking book documents significant changes in psychodynamic theory and practice as relational thinking is superseding the classical drive model. The emphasis on therapist training and clinical illustrations is particularly helpful." --Hans H. Strupp, PhD, Distinguished Professor of Psychology, Emeritus, Vanderbilt University "This book is an unparalleled achievement that transcends many of the usual dichotomies in the field. Structured as a treatment manual, the book elaborates detailed interventions and techniques, but it is also personal and experiential, emphasizing procedural knowledge, self-awareness, and reflection-in-action. It is among the few comprehensive texts that truly integrates ongoing empirical research with cutting-edge developments in clinical psychoanalysis, as well as elements of other therapeutic modalities. It outlines broad theoretical and philosophical principles, yet at the same time provides clear-cut intervention strategies, illustrated with lively and meaningful clinical material. On top of all this it is clearly and engagingly written, well organized, and even includes a creative chapter on the largely unexamined area of training issues and supervision. This book will be used both as a classroom text and as a sourcebook for working clinicians, researchers, and theorists." --Lewis Aron, PhD, Director, Postdoctoral Program in Psychotherapy and Psychoanalysis, New York University "This is a brilliant book. Informed by the authors' internationally recognized research program on ruptures in the therapeutic alliance, the book is enlightening in two major ways. First, its focus on ruptures opens a route to understanding the nature and utility of the therapeutic alliance. Second, the authors show how to negotiate ruptures, offering a veritable guide to moving from rupture to healing. Focusing on an important and neglected area of clinical training, this is an invaluable text for beginning and advanced psychotherapy courses." --Lester Luborsk, "This excellent text more than fulfills the promise of the title; it is a welcome addition to the general literature of psychotherapy....The chapters flow naturally from one to the other, and the ideas presented are well integrated and form a coherent whole....I recommend it warmly to all psychotherapists, whatever their discipline; it is written from a psychodynamic point of view but could be read with advantage by therapists using nondynamic approaches. The authors are obviously very competent on the subject."--Canadian Journal of Psychiatry "Negotiating the Therapeutic Allianceis a good book. The authors come to the task of writing this book from rich backgrounds....I find much to praise in these pages. First, the book gives credence and function to the therapeutic alliance as a vital component of the therapeutic relation and interaction. In the face of oppositional counter-currents prevailing in many corners of the psychotherapeutic empire, particularly those using concepts of transference and countertransference to cover all aspects of the therapeutic relation, the acknowledgment and effort to work with the therapeutic alliance, as an element in therapy different and distinct from transference, countertransference, or both is praiseworthy. Second the coverage is comprehensive and detailed, discussing many important aspects of this complex and difficult subject. Third, the theoretical discussions are complemented by copious clinical vignettes that serve to illuminate the material under discussion, adding a practical and useful dimension to the discussion. Fourth, I approach this book as a clinical psychoanalyst with many years of experience. My reading found nothing in the discussion of clinical material that was not immediately familiar to me as an analyst, and nothing that was not comfortably congruent with my own understanding of and utilization of the analytic method. The suggestions and recommendations for reconstituting the therapeutic alliance are resonant with my own experience and I have found similar recommendations in my own efforts to deal with these issues (Meissner, 1996)....an excellent introduction to some aspects of the therapeutic alliance and should serve psychotherapists, particularly those learning the trade who are being confronted with difficult patients and difficult situations of disruption of the alliance and therapeutic impasses, and are looking for a helping hand."--Contemporary Psychology "Beginning psychotherapists, psychotherapists who struggle in their work with patients with characterological issues, and psychotherapists trying to adapt their techniques to fit the demands of shorter treatment periods are likely to find this book useful....their practical and well-founded approach may lead readers to feel rejuvenated about how to approach difficult moments in treatment."--Bulletin of the Menninger Clinic "One of [this book's] major strengths is the richness and abundance of clinical material. The numerous vignettes reflect the complexities and imperfections of real live therapeutic process and beautifully illustrate in action the very ideas and principles the authors propose. Explicit, detailed, and alive in the writing, the clinical vignettes breathe off the page. Safran and Muran write with the authority of long clinical experience. These are therapists who have been in the trenches of intensive psychotherapy, who have banged their heads against many walls and know from the gut just how lousy it feels to be stuck. They have thought about these matters deeply and the reader benefits from their experience....Safran and Muran have made a substantial and original contribution to the field, accomplishing what they set out to do: providing a theoretical rationale for the therapeutic alliance and providing a treasure trove of highly specific tools of both attitude and action (stance and technique). If these insights are incorporated
Illustrated
Yes
Dewey Decimal
616.89/14
Table Of Content
Contents 1. The Therapeutic Alliance Reconsidered 2. Fundamental Assumptions and Principles 3. Understanding Alliance Ruptures and Therapeutic Impasses 4. Therapeutic Metacommunication: Mindfulness in Action 5. Stage-Process Models of Alliance Rupture Resolution 6. Brief Relational Therapy 7. A Relational Approach to Training and Supervision Afterword References
Synopsis
50 years of psychotherapy research shows that quality of therapeutic alliance is the most robust predictor of treatment success. The book provides a framework for negotiating impasses in the alliance and transforming them into breakthroughs., A half-century of psychotherapy research has shown that the quality of the therapeutic alliance is the most robust predictor of treatment success. This practical, theoretically sophisticated book provides a systematic framework for negotiating ruptures in the alliance and transforming them into therapeutic breakthroughs. The book is grounded in recent developments in relational psychoanalysis, as well as findings from the authors' highly regarded research program. Chapters spell out clear principles of intervention illustrated with extensive clinical vignettes and transcript material. Particular attention is given to the therapist's inner processes and the role they play in resolving alliance ruptures. Other topics covered include the use of therapist self-disclosure and metacommunication; interactional patterns of successful therapist-patient dyads; applications to short-term treatment; and guidelines for training and supervision., A half-century of psychotherapy research has shown that the quality of the therapeutic alliance is the most robust predictor of treatment success. This practical book provides a systematic framework for negotiating impasses in the alliance and transforming them into therapeutic breakthroughs. The book is grounded in recent developments in relational psychoanalysis, as well as findings from the authors' highly regarded research program. Chapters spell out clear principles of intervention illustrated with extensive clinical vignettes and transcript material.
LC Classification Number
RC480.5.S24 2000

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