Brief report: On becoming a group therapist |
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Authors: | Dr. Joel C. Frost Ed.D. F.A.G.P.A. Anne Alonso Ph.D. F.A.G.P.A. |
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Affiliation: | (1) Harvard Medical School, USA;(2) Beth Israel Hospital, Israel;(3) 520 Commonwealth Avenue, Suite 214, 02215-2605 Boston, MA;(4) Fielding Institute, USA |
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Abstract: | Clinicians have become group therapists via many routes, either voluntarily or not. Group psychotherapy itself has had a checkered history, in that it has often been seen as an ancillary or a second choice form of treatment. Indeed, we know that there is a growing number of well-respected clinicians who are not only not ambivalent about being seen as group clinicians, but embrace this reality as a primary clinical identity. It has occurred to us that no one has looked deeply at this developmental path or what facilitates or inhibits movement along this path. This article is a preliminary attempt to initiate this line of study. |
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