The Wiley–Blackwell Handbook of Group Psychotherapy
Samenvatting
A user–friendly guide of best practice for leading groups in various settings and with different populations, which incorporates the latest developments in today′s mental health marketplace.
Features multiple theoretical perspectives and guidelines for running groups for diverse populations, in the US and worldwide
Offers modern approaches and practical suggestions in a user–friendly and jargon–free style, with many clinical examples
Includes a major component on resiliency and trauma relief work, and explores its impact on clinicians
Accompanied by an online resource featuring discussions of psychotherapeutic techniques in practice
Specificaties
Inhoudsopgave
<p>1. Introduction to Group Psychotherapy 1<br /> Jeffrey L. Kleinberg</p>
<p>Section One: Building the Frame: Theoretical Models 9</p>
<p>Introduction 9</p>
<p>2. Psychoanalytic Group Psychotherapy: An Overview 13<br /> Priscilla F. Kauff</p>
<p>3. The Interpersonal Model of Group Psychotherapy 33<br /> Molyn Leszcz and Jan Malat</p>
<p>4. Towards an Integrative Intersubjective and Relational Group Psychotherapy 59<br /> Victor L. Schermer and Cecil A. Rice</p>
<p>5. Integrative Cognitive–Behavioral Group Therapy 89<br /> Greg Crosby, with Donald Altman</p>
<p>6. Functional Subgrouping and the Systems–Centered Approach to Group Therapy 113<br /> Susan P. Gantt</p>
<p>7. The Functional Group Model 139<br /> Sharan L. Schwartzberg and Mary Alicia Barnes</p>
<p>8. It′s All About Me: Introduction to Relational Group Psychotherapy 169<br /> Richard M. Billow</p>
<p>9. Resonance among Members and its Therapeutic Value in Group Psychotherapy 187<br /> Avi Berman</p>
<p>10. The Dynamics of Mirror Reactions and their Impact on the Analytic Group 197<br /> Miriam Berger</p>
<p>11. Meeting Maturational Needs in Modern Group Analysis: A Schema for Personality Integration and Interpersonal Effectiveness 217<br /> Elliot Zeisel</p>
<p>12. Developing the Role of the Group Facilitator: Learning from Experience 231<br /> Orit Nuttman–Shwartz and Sarit Shay</p>
<p>13. From Empathically Immersed Inquiry to Discrete Intervention: Are There Limits to Theoretical Purity? 249<br /> Steven L. Van Wagoner</p>
<p>Section Two: Groups for Adults 271</p>
<p>Introduction 271</p>
<p>14. Support and Process–Oriented Therapy Groups 275<br /> Lise Motherwell</p>
<p>15. Working with the Difficult Group Patient 299<br /> Phyllis F. Cohen</p>
<p>16. Working with Primitive Defenses in Group 321<br /> Martha Gilmore</p>
<p>17. Structured Techniques to Facilitate Relating at Various Levels in Group 335<br /> Albert J. Brok</p>
<p>18. Effective Management of Substance Abuse Issues in Psychodynamic Group Psychotherapy 345<br /> Marsha Vannicelli</p>
<p>19. Single–Gender or Mixed–Gender Groups: Choosing a Perspective 381<br /> Darryl L. Pure</p>
<p>20. Sexual Diversity in Group Psychotherapy 397<br /> Morris Nitsun</p>
<p>21. Group Therapy For Females Molested In Girlhood 409<br /> Shoshana Ben–Noam</p>
<p>22. Couples Group Psychotherapy: A Quarter of a Century Retrospective 431<br /> Judith Coché</p>
<p>23. The Large Group: Dynamics, Social Implications and Therapeutic Value 457<br /> Haim Weinberg and Daniel J. N. Weishut</p>
<p>24. Dreams and Dreamtelling: A Group Approach 479<br /> Robi Friedman</p>
<p>25. Group Interventions Following Trauma and Disaster 499<br /> Suzanne B. Phillips and Robert H. Klein</p>
<p>26. After the Conflict: Training of Group Supervision in Guatemala 517<br /> Elisabeth Rohr</p>
<p>27. Group Psychotherapy for Patients with Psychosis: A Psychodynamic (Group–Analytic) Approach 547<br /> Ivan Urlic</p>
<p>28. Care for the Caregivers 571<br /> Richard Beck</p>
<p>Section Three: Groups for Children 587</p>
<p>Introduction 587</p>
<p>29. Group Therapy with Children 589<br /> Seth Aronson</p>
<p>30. Adolescent Group Psychotherapy: The Real Work 609<br /> Andrew P. Pojman</p>
<p>31. The Earth as a Classroom: Children s Groups in the Aftermath of Mass Trauma 623<br /> Emily Zeng</p>
<p>32. A Multidisciplinary Treatment Team Model for Youth Offenders in Correctional Treatment Centers: Applying Psychodynamic Group Concepts 645<br /> D. Thomas Stone Jr. and Anne Carson Thomas</p>
<p>Section Four: Diversity 665</p>
<p>Introduction 665</p>
<p>33. Diversity in Groups: Culture, Ethnicity and Race 667<br /> Siddharth Ashvin Shah and Razia Kosi</p>
<p>34. A Spiritually Informed Approach to Group Psychotherapy 681<br /> Alexis D. Abernethy</p>
<p>Section Five: Through a Personal Lens 707</p>
<p>Introduction 707</p>
<p>35. Group Psychotherapy as my Career Path 709<br /> Walter N. Stone</p>
<p>36. My Development as a Group Therapist 731<br /> Marvin L. Aronson</p>
<p>37. Group Psychotherapy with High–Functioning Adults Or, People Like Me! 745<br /> Bonnie J. Buchele</p>
<p>Author Index 771</p>
<p>Subject Index 785</p>

