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Psychotherapy is a set of techniques believed to cure or to help solve behavioral and other psychological problems in humans. The common part of these techniques is direct personal
contact between therapist and patient, mainly in the form of talking. Owing to the
nature of these communications, there are significant issues of patient privacy and/or client
confidentiality.
Schools and approaches
While behaviour is often a target of the work, many approaches value the notion of "psyche" in the root of the word. This is
especially true of the psychodynamic schools of psychotherapy, which today include Jungian therapy and Psychodrama. Other
approaches focus on the link between the mind and body and try to access deeper levels of the psyche through manipulation of the
physical body. Examples are Rolfing, Pulsing and Postural Integration.
Psychoanalysis was the original form of psychotherapy, but many
other theories and techniques are now used by psychotherapists, psychologists, psychiatrists, personal growth
facilitators and social workers. Techniques for group therapy have been developed.
A distinction can be made between those psychotherapies that employ a medical model and those that employ a humanistic model.
In the medical model the client is seen as unwell and the therapist employs their skill to help them back to health. An example
would be Freudian psychotherapy. In the humanistic model the therapist
facilitates learning in the individual and the clients own natural process draws them to a fuller understanding of themselves. An
example would be Gestalt therapy.
A common form of psychotherapy is cognitive behavioural
therapy. This is particularly common where the form of psychotherapy is dictated by the demands of insurance companies who wish to see a financially limited commitment.
A computer program called ELIZA has been built to perform an automated and extremely
simplified version of Rogersian psychotherapy.
List of psychotherapeutic modalities
In the 20th century a bewildering range of psychotherapies sprang up in western societies.
The following is only a partial list:
List of techniques used in psychotherapy
The following techniques may be employed in psychotherapy although which are used will depend on the nature of the therapy
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- Minimal
Encouragers
- Paradoxical intention
- Reflective
Listening
- Regression
- Role play
- Sand play
- Unconditional positive regard
- Validation
- Working through Projections
- Working through Transference
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Related topics
Therapy, Psychology, Attachment, Defence
mechanism Neurosis, Psychosis,
Psychiatry
References
An introduction to Psychodynamic schools
- Anthony Bateman, Dennis Brown, Jonathan Pedder Introduction to Psychotherapy: An Outline of Psychodynamic Principles and
Practice; Routledge; ISBN
0415205697; June 2000
- Bateman, A. & Holmes J. Introduction to Psychoanalysis: Contemporary Theory and Practice; Routledge; ISBN 0415107393; 1995
An introduction to Humanistic schools
- John Rowan; Ordinary Ecstacy: Brunner-Routledge; ISBN 0415236320; March 2001
External links
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