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This book offers clinicians a long-awaited comprehensive paradigm
for assessing object relations functioning in disturbed younger and
older adolescents. It gives a clear sense of how object relations
functioning is manifest in different disorders, and illuminates how
scores on object relations measures are converted into a
therapeutically relevant diagnostic matrix and formulation.
Outlining the process of object relations assessment, Kelly
presents vividly detailed cases of a range of disorders including
anorexia nervosa, borderline states, depressive disorders, and
trauma. The cases portray the vicissitudes of object relations
functioning and disruption that result in a unique structural
developmental composite for a given adolescent. A major concern is
demonstrating the utility and validity of two object representation
measures--The Mutuality of Autonomy Scale (MOA) and The Social
Cognition Object Relations Scale (SCORS)--that are the main ones
employed in the assessment of adolescents. MOA and SCORS scores
facilitate a multidimensional understanding of the nuances of an
adolescent's object relations functioning, and provide clinicians
with organized, theory-based data leading to clear, specific
treatment directions and guidelines and appropriate therapeutic
programming. The book addresses the following questions: * Is
individual psychotherapy indicated--will this adolescent benefit
from an insight-oriented approach? * What are the likely directions
that transference parameters will take in the treatment? * What
types of countertransference reactions are likely to be anticipated
in a given patient? * Is medication likely to be helpful in making
this adolescent more accessible for treatment? Focusing only on
adolescents, covering both the TAT and the Rorschach, and utilizing
object relations theory as its major interpretive foundation, the
book offers practitioners an alternative to general references
based on a more actuarial, nomothetic, and atheoretical
interpretive approach. It reflects one school of contemporary
thought in projective assessment--one that advocates a more
phenomenological, theory-based approach to test application and
interpretation.
The past decade has seen more and more clinicians involved in the
assessment and treatment of abused and traumatized children. They
have contributed to an impressively large body of literature on the
impact of abuse and trauma at all ages, the focus of which has been
the short and long-term sequelae apparent in the child's behavior,
emotional experience, and social interaction. But there have been
few efforts to investigate the ways in which abuse and trauma
damage the intrapsychic systems and structures that often guide,
direct, and inform the child's manifest adjustment and functioning.
The need to redress the balance was the major impetus for this
book. Kelly offers a clinical paradigm for the personality
assessment of abused or traumatized children via projective
instruments--the TAT and Rorschach--and shows how various
projective measures and indices can be utilized as sensitive
barometers of changes in self, object, and ego functioning
following therapeutic interventions and other corrective
experiences. But further, integrating the tenets of trauma theory
and those of psychoanalytic theory, he sets this clinical paradigm
in a meaningful theoretical context, and draws on both theory and
clinical experience to develop a comprehensive psychological
composite of the child who has been maltreated. Part I provides an
overview of theoretical models relevant to the assessment and
diagnosis of the maltreated child. Contemporary psychoanalytic
theory serves as one frame and is discussed first, with particular
emphasis on object relations and ego functions. Equal attention is
devoted to developmental psychology as another frame. Part II
reviews relevant research. The Mutality of Autonomy Scale (MOA) and
the Social Cognition and Object Relations Scale (SCORS) are
introduced as examples of reliable and valid instruments readily
employed to assess the impact of abuse or trauma on a child's
object relations functioning. Additional Rorschach
indices--boundary disturbance measures, thought disorder indices,
trauma markers, and defensive functions measures--are discussed as
measures of the impact on different facets of ego functioning.
These various projective measures can be utilized as sensitive
barometers of changes in self, object, and ego functioning
following therapeutic interventions and other corrective
experiences. Part III includes a variety of extended clinical
illustrations. Seven cases of boys and girls subjected to varying
degrees of abuse and trauma are presented to demonstrate the
clinical utility of projective material for assessment, diagnosis,
and treatment planning. For the clinician who takes the
idiographical-phenomenological approach, appropriate given the
uniqueness of each situation of abuse or trauma and the frequent
brevity and barrenness of the protocol, such material can open a
window onto a rich vista of the child's psychological terrain. The
resulting map can point the way to wise decisions about type,
timing, and level of therapeutic intervention, the resolution of
such process issues as transference and countertransference, plus
additional questions. Two cases of adult women who were abused as
children and find themselves continuing to struggle with enduring
unresolved issues vis a vis their own children are also presented.
These cases underscore the value of TAT and Rorschach material, and
object relations measures, in assessing and understanding the
abusive and potentially abusive parent.
This book offers clinicians a long-awaited comprehensive paradigm
for assessing object relations functioning in disturbed younger and
older adolescents. It gives a clear sense of how object relations
functioning is manifest in different disorders, and illuminates how
scores on object relations measures are converted into a
therapeutically relevant diagnostic matrix and formulation.
Outlining the process of object relations assessment, Kelly
presents vividly detailed cases of a range of disorders including
anorexia nervosa, borderline states, depressive disorders, and
trauma. The cases portray the vicissitudes of object relations
functioning and disruption that result in a unique structural
developmental composite for a given adolescent.
A major concern is demonstrating the utility and validity of two
object representation measures--The Mutuality of Autonomy Scale
(MOA) and The Social Cognition Object Relations Scale (SCORS)--that
are the main ones employed in the assessment of adolescents. MOA
and SCORS scores facilitate a multidimensional understanding of the
nuances of an adolescent's object relations functioning, and
provide clinicians with organized, theory-based data leading to
clear, specific treatment directions and guidelines and appropriate
therapeutic programming. The book addresses the following
questions:
* Is individual psychotherapy indicated--will this adolescent
benefit from an insight-oriented approach?
* What are the likely directions that transference parameters will
take in the treatment?
* What types of countertransference reactions are likely to be
anticipated in a given patient?
* Is medication likely to be helpful in making this adolescent
more accessible for treatment?
Focusing only on adolescents, covering both the TAT and the
Rorschach, and utilizing object relations theory as its major
interpretive foundation, the book offers practitioners an
alternative to general references based on a more actuarial,
nomothetic, and atheoretical interpretive approach. It reflects one
school of contemporary thought in projective assessment--one that
advocates a more phenomenological, theory-based approach to test
application and interpretation.
The past decade has seen more and more clinicians involved in the
assessment and treatment of abused and traumatized children. They
have contributed to an impressively large body of literature on the
impact of abuse and trauma at all ages, the focus of which has been
the short and long-term sequelae apparent in the child's behavior,
emotional experience, and social interaction. But there have been
few efforts to investigate the ways in which abuse and trauma
damage the intrapsychic systems and structures that often guide,
direct, and inform the child's manifest adjustment and functioning.
The need to redress the balance was the major impetus for this
book.
Kelly offers a clinical paradigm for the personality assessment of
abused or traumatized children via projective instruments--the TAT
and Rorschach--and shows how various projective measures and
indices can be utilized as sensitive barometers of changes in self,
object, and ego functioning following therapeutic interventions and
other corrective experiences. But further, integrating the tenets
of trauma theory and those of psychoanalytic theory, he sets this
clinical paradigm in a meaningful theoretical context, and draws on
both theory and clinical experience to develop a comprehensive
psychological composite of the child who has been maltreated.
Part I provides an overview of theoretical models relevant to the
assessment and diagnosis of the maltreated child. Contemporary
psychoanalytic theory serves as one frame and is discussed first,
with particular emphasis on object relations and ego functions.
Equal attention is devoted to developmental psychology as another
frame.
Part II reviews relevant research. The Mutality of Autonomy Scale
(MOA) and the Social Cognition and Object Relations Scale (SCORS)
are introduced as examples of reliable and valid instruments
readily employed to assess the impact of abuse or trauma on a
child's object relations functioning. Additional Rorschach
indices--boundary disturbance measures, thought disorder indices,
trauma markers, and defensive functions measures--are discussed as
measures of the impact on different facets of ego functioning.
These various projective measures can be utilized as sensitive
barometers of changes in self, object, and ego functioning
following therapeutic interventions and other corrective
experiences.
Part III includes a variety of extended clinical illustrations.
Seven cases of boys and girls subjected to varying degrees of
abuse and trauma are presented to demonstrate the clinical utility
of projective material for assessment, diagnosis, and treatment
planning. For the clinician who takes the
idiographical-phenomenological approach, appropriate given the
uniqueness of each situation of abuse or trauma and the frequent
brevity and barrenness of the protocol, such material can open a
window onto a rich vista of the child's psychological terrain. The
resulting map can point the way to wise decisions about type,
timing, and level of therapeutic intervention, the resolution of
such process issues as transference and countertransference, plus
additional questions.
Two cases of adult women who were abused as children and find
themselves continuing to struggle with enduring unresolved issues
vis a vis their own children are also presented. These cases
underscore the value of TAT and Rorschach material, and object
relations measures, in assessing and understanding the abusive and
potentially abusive parent.
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