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Psychoanalytic Therapy As Health Care - Effectiveness and Economics In the 21st Century (Hardcover)
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Psychoanalytic Therapy As Health Care - Effectiveness and Economics In the 21st Century (Hardcover)
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In Psychoanalytic Therapy as Health Care, a timely and trenchant
consideration of the clash of values between managed care and
psychoanalysis, contributors elaborate a thoughtful defense of the
therapeutic necessity and social importance of contemporary
psychoanalytic and psychodynamic approaches in the provision of
mental health care.
Part I begins with the question of where psychoanalytic treatments
now stand in relation to health care; contributors offer
explanations of the current state of affairs and consider possible
directions of future developments. Part II looks directly at the
conundrums that have resulted from the attempt to integrate
psychotherapy and managed care, with contributors examining the
ethical and legal dimensions of confidentiality, privacy, and
reporting to third parties. Part III opens to wider consideration
of the experiences of psychoanalysts under health care systems
throughout the world. Finally, Part IV demonstrates the relevance
of contemporary psychoanalytic approaches to a variety of
contemporary patient populations, with contributors focusing on the
applicability of analytically oriented treatment to AIDS patients,
seriously disturbed young adults, and inner-city clinic patients.
Collectively, the contributors to Psychoanalytic Therapy as Health
Care convincingly refute the claim that psychoanalytically informed
therapy is an esoteric treatment suited only to the "worried well."
Drawing on a wide range of clinical and empirical evidence, they
forcefully argue that contemporary psychoanalytic approaches are
applicable to seriously distressed persons in a variety of
treatment contexts. Failure to include such long-term therapies
within health care delivery systems, they conclude, will deprive
many patients of help they need - and help from which they can
benefit in enduring ways that far transcend the limited treatment
goals of managed care.
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