1st Edition

Psychosocial Approaches to Deeply Disturbed Persons

Edited By E Mark Stern, Peter R Breggin Copyright 1996
    250 Pages
    by Routledge

    250 Pages
    by Routledge

    At a time when biological psychiatry claims that drugs and electroshock are the best methods for helping deeply disturbed persons, mental health professionals need to be reminded that psychological and social approaches to mental illnesses remain more effective, less harmful, and much more able to address the real needs of recovery, growth, and development for affected persons. Psychosocial Approaches to Deeply Disturbed Persons empowers counselors, psychiatrists, psychologists, and social workers to trust their intuitive and clinical understanding of how to help seriously disturbed people through humane, caring approaches.

    Psychosocial Approaches to Deeply Disturbed Persons introduces mental health professionals to an array of psychological and social alternatives that are available for helping patients considered “psychotic” or very emotionally disturbed. Focusing on psychological and social approaches to helping people who become labeled “psychotic” or who carry serious psychiatric diagnoses, contributors show mental health professionals psychological, social, and spiritual alternatives for approaching or treating these individuals. Readers learn about:

    • a successful model for nonmedical, non-drug residential treatment centers
    • utilizing the artwork of psychotic patients
    • case histories of psychoanalytic therapy
    • group therapy to help families with a “schizophrenic” member improve communication
    • Re-evaluation Counseling (RC) with disturbed individuals
    • psychoanalytically-oriented therapy
    • World Health Organization research which demonstrates the positive effect of extended family and social relationships and the negative effect of modern biopsychiatric treatment
    • research demonstrating the efficacy of psychotherapy with persons labeled “schizophrenic”

      These chapters combined with a review of empirical studies demonstrate to readers the efficacy of psychotherapy with psychotic patients. Students or experienced professionals in any of the mental health fields, including psychotherapy, counseling, clinical psychology, clinical social work, and Re-evaluation Counseling will find Psychosocial Approaches to Deeply Disturbed Persons a necessity for most effectively and humanely treating clients with serious psychiatric diagnoses.

    Contents Introduction: Spearheading a Transformation
    • Schizophrenic Experience: A Humanistic Perspective
    • Psychotherapy and the Fear of Understanding Schizophrenia
    • Soteria: A Therapeutic Community for Psychotic Persons
    • Perceptions of Psychologists and Psychiatrists
    • Psychotherapy with “Schizophrenia”: Analysis of Metaphor to Reveal Trauma and Conflict
    • Surviving the “Mental Health” System with Co-Counseling
    • Yielding to a Higher Power
    • No Place Like Home
    • Working with the Families of Schizophrenic Patients
    • WHO Studies on Schizophrenia: An Overview of the Results and Their Implications for the Understanding of the Disorder
    • Reference Notes Included

    Biography

    Stern, E Mark; Breggin, Peter R