- Acknowledgements
- Preface
- Contributors
- 1 The Question of Personal Therapy
- 2 The Training Analysis in the Mainstream Freudian Model
- 3 The Role of Personal Therapy in the Formation of a Jungian Analyst
- 4 Personal Therapy and Growth Work in Experiential-Humanistic Therapies
- 5 Personal Therapy in Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy
- 6 The Role and Current Practice of Personal Therapy in Systemic/Family Therapy
- 7 My Experience of Analysis with Fairbairn and Winnicott
- 8 My Experiences as a Patient in Five Psychoanalytic Psychotherapies
- 9 The Personal Therapy Experiences of a Rational Emotive-Behavior Therapist
- 10 The I and the Self
- 11 The Role of Individual and Marital Therapy in My Development
- 12 A Shamanic Tapestry
- 13 The Prevalence and Parameters of Personal Therapy in the United States
- 14 The Prevalence and Parameters of Personal Therapy in Europe and Elsewhere
- 15 Psychotherapists Entering Personal Therapy
- 16 The Selection and Characteristics of Therapists’ Psychotherapists
- 17 Outcomes and Impacts of the Psychotherapist’s Own Psychotherapy
- 18 On Analyzing Colleagues (Trainees Included)
- 19 Treating Psychotherapists with Cognitive Therapy
- 20 Feminist Therapy with Therapists
- 21 Listening to the Listener
- 22 Conducting Marital and Family Therapy with Therapists
- 23 Group Therapy for Therapists in Gestalt Therapy Training
- 24 Treating Impaired Psychotherapists and “Wounded Healers”
- 25 Research on Conducting Psychotherapy with Mental Health Professionals
- 26 Training Analyses
- 27 Boundaries And Internalization in the Psychotherapy of Psychotherapists
- Epilogue The Patient Psychotherapist, the Psychotherapist’s Psychotherapist, and the Therapist as a Person
- Appendix Guidelines for Firsthand Accounts
- Index
(p. 345) Research on Conducting Psychotherapy with Mental Health Professionals
- Chapter:
- (p. 345) Research on Conducting Psychotherapy with Mental Health Professionals
- Author(s):
Jesse D. Geller
, John C. Norcross
, and David E. Orlinsky
- DOI:
- 10.1093/med:psych/9780195133943.003.0025
This chapter has two primary purposes. The first is to present a practice-friendly research review on such basic questions as: How frequently do psychotherapists treat other therapists? What are the characteristics of these therapist-patients? Who are the therapists’ therapists? What treatment modalities are typically offered? What distinguishes the treatment of mental health professionals compared to lay persons? The second purpose is to contribute to the development of an organized body of knowledge that can effectively guide the work of therapists who are therapists of fellow mental health professionals.
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- Acknowledgements
- Preface
- Contributors
- 1 The Question of Personal Therapy
- 2 The Training Analysis in the Mainstream Freudian Model
- 3 The Role of Personal Therapy in the Formation of a Jungian Analyst
- 4 Personal Therapy and Growth Work in Experiential-Humanistic Therapies
- 5 Personal Therapy in Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy
- 6 The Role and Current Practice of Personal Therapy in Systemic/Family Therapy
- 7 My Experience of Analysis with Fairbairn and Winnicott
- 8 My Experiences as a Patient in Five Psychoanalytic Psychotherapies
- 9 The Personal Therapy Experiences of a Rational Emotive-Behavior Therapist
- 10 The I and the Self
- 11 The Role of Individual and Marital Therapy in My Development
- 12 A Shamanic Tapestry
- 13 The Prevalence and Parameters of Personal Therapy in the United States
- 14 The Prevalence and Parameters of Personal Therapy in Europe and Elsewhere
- 15 Psychotherapists Entering Personal Therapy
- 16 The Selection and Characteristics of Therapists’ Psychotherapists
- 17 Outcomes and Impacts of the Psychotherapist’s Own Psychotherapy
- 18 On Analyzing Colleagues (Trainees Included)
- 19 Treating Psychotherapists with Cognitive Therapy
- 20 Feminist Therapy with Therapists
- 21 Listening to the Listener
- 22 Conducting Marital and Family Therapy with Therapists
- 23 Group Therapy for Therapists in Gestalt Therapy Training
- 24 Treating Impaired Psychotherapists and “Wounded Healers”
- 25 Research on Conducting Psychotherapy with Mental Health Professionals
- 26 Training Analyses
- 27 Boundaries And Internalization in the Psychotherapy of Psychotherapists
- Epilogue The Patient Psychotherapist, the Psychotherapist’s Psychotherapist, and the Therapist as a Person
- Appendix Guidelines for Firsthand Accounts
- Index