1st Edition

Emphasizing the Interpersonal in Psychotherapy Families and Groups in the Era of Cost Containment

By Claude Villeneuve Copyright 2001

    With today's recent mental health care reforms many psychotherapists are being forced to reexamine the relevance of their practices. Economic pressures, managed care, and the discrepancy between what a therapist hopes to accomplish, and what the relative limitations of his or her treatments are, makes the future of psychotherapy uncertain. This provocative new book examines the failings of current individual psychotherapies and offers a model based on larger interpersonal schemes. This resource will be invaluable not only to therapists who are faced with the need to modify their practices, but also to any mental health practitioner who hopes to develop a more effective form of psychotherapy.

    Preface. Part 1: The Field of Psychotherapy. Overview. Shortcomings of Individual Psychotherapy. Part 2: The Interpersonal. The Interpersonal Orientation. Conjoint Therapy. Group Approaches. Part 3: Applications of the Interpersonal Orientation. Conjoint and Group Therapy across the Life Span. Conjoint and Group Therapy and Some Psychiatric Conditions. Integration. Conclusion. References.

    Biography

    Claude Villeneuve is an adjunct professor in the Department of Psychiatry at the University of Montreal in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. He is a former director of the family therapy unit at the Allan Memorial Institute, McGill University, and is now affiliated with the Department of Psychiatry at Sainte-Justine Hospital. An esteemed teacher in psychotherapy, Dr. Villeneuve has trained at the Canadian Psychoanalytic Institute.