Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-vdxz6 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-25T22:11:57.899Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Psychotherapy with Failures of Psychoanalysis

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 January 2018

Extract

From time to time patients come to one who have had years of unsuccessful psychotherapy and are in desperate need of help. To undertake the treatment of such patients is to face many difficulties. Understandably they are suspicious of the new therapist; it will not do if he reminds them of the one who disillusioned them, but if they come to like or trust him they may feel that they are being disloyal to their first therapist, to whom they still have some attachment. If they notice improvement in their condition it gives them no pleasure, for they know that they have relapsed after appearing to improve in the past. On the other hand, any setback upsets them greatly; they are convinced that they will never get well, and blame either the therapist or themselves or both. They have been made to feel that analysis is the only worthwhile therapy, and that there must be something quite specially wrong with them if it cannot help them as it has helped others; so their depression and sense of failure are reinforced. Often it is not only their psychological condition but also their realistic situation that has deteriorated, sometimes beyond repair.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Royal College of Psychiatrists, 1970 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1. MacAlpine, I. (1950). ‘The development of the transference.’ Psycho-analytic Quarterly, XIX.Google Scholar
2. Jaffin, D. (1968). ‘The methodology of the historian and psycho-analysis: can subjectivity be eliminated?’ International Journal of Offender Therapy, Vol. XII, No. 2.Google Scholar
3. See on the need to have ideals for normal development: Shepard (1969) & Ginandes, : ‘The generation gap in America.’ International Journal of Offender Therapy, Vol. XIII, No. I.Google Scholar
4. A Patient (1967). ‘A failure of analysis.’ International Journal of Offender Therapy, Vol. 11, No. I.Google Scholar
5. Glover, Edward. (1955). ‘Therapeutic criteria of psycho-analysis’, in: The Technique of Psycho-Analysis, International Universities Press, New York.Google Scholar
6. For some interesting descriptions of failures see: Mac Runswick, Buth: Supplement to Freud's History of an Infantile Neurosis, International Journal of Psycho-analysis, IX, 1928.Google Scholar
Oberndorf, C. P. (1950). ‘Unsatisfactory results of psychoanalytic therapy.’ Psycho-analytic Quarterlyy XIX.Google Scholar
Schmideberg, Melitta. (1964). ‘From progressive education into mental institutions.’ Journal of Offender Therapy, Vol. VIII, No. 3.Google Scholar
Eysenck, Hans J. (1965). ‘The effects of psychotherapy,’ followed by Discussions from numerous contributors. International Journal of Psychiatry, Vol. I, No. 1-4.Google Scholar
7. Freud, S. (1937). ‘Analysis terminable and interminable.’ International Journal of Psycho-Analysis, XVIII.Google Scholar
Glover, Edward. (1952). ‘Research methods in psycho analysis.’ International Journal of Psycho-Analysis, XXIII.Google Scholar
Bartemeier, L. (1952). Presidential Address to the XVII International Psycho-analytic Congress, Interruitional Journal of Psycho Analysis, XXIV.Google Scholar
8. Alexander, Franz. (1950). ‘Analysis of the therapeutic factors in psycho-analytic treatment.’ Psycho-analytic Quarterly, XIX.Google Scholar
Appel, K. E. (1956). ‘Psycho-analysis: Reflections on varying concepts.’ Amer. J. Psychiat., 112, 711.Google Scholar
Knight, R. P. (1954). ‘The present status of organized psychoanalysis in the United States’, in: Knight-Friedman, (Eds.) Psychoanalytic Psychiatry and Psychology, International Universities Press, New York.Google Scholar
9. Schmideberg, Melitta. (1958). ‘Values and goals in psychotherapy.’ Psychiatric Quarterly. Google Scholar
Submit a response

eLetters

No eLetters have been published for this article.