首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
     


Betrayal And Paranoia: The Psychotherapist's Function as an Intermediary
Authors:Giovanni Carlo Zapparoli  Maria Clotilde Gislon
Affiliation:(1) Institute for Study and Research on Mental Illness, Milan, Italy;(2) IseRDip, Milano, Italy
Abstract:We present an approach to the problem of structuring a therapeutic alliance with patients presenting paranoid symptoms, using both psychoanalytical and cognitive techniques. Initially, we focused on one of the main aspects of the paranoid worldview: the fear of being betrayed and the tendency to betray. This is a defense maneuver, through which patients deny their passivity, and the impotence in the relationship with their own internal needs and with the significant people in the external world, including the therapist. In our experience to build up a working relationship, both a psychoanalytical interpretation of unconscious conflicts and the cognitive analysis of dysfunctional beliefs are needed. Often, in more serious cases, the role of ldquononqualified objectrdquo must be accepted at the beginning, due to the patient's need to be in control of the situation. Only then can a therapeutic phase begin, in most cases, through an integrated approach that includes pharmacological, psychodynamic, and cognitive modalities.
Keywords:paranoid patients  tendency to betray  working alliance  need to not have needs  the therapist as a   /content/x68671084g361715/xxlarge8220.gif"   alt="  ldquo"   align="  MIDDLE"   BORDER="  0"  >nonqualified object  /content/x68671084g361715/xxlarge8221.gif"   alt="  rdquo"   align="  MIDDLE"   BORDER="  0"  >  integration of interventions
本文献已被 SpringerLink 等数据库收录!
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号