1st Edition

Symptom-Focused Dynamic Psychotherapy

By Mary E. Connors Copyright 2006
    305 Pages
    by Routledge

    304 Pages
    by Routledge

    Traditionally, psychoanalytically oriented clinicians have eschewed a direct focus on symptoms, viewing it as superficial turning away from underlying psychopathology. But this assumption is an artifact of a dated classical approach; it should be reexamined in the light of contemporary relational thinking. So argues Mary Connors in Symptom-Focused Dynamic Psychotherapy, an integrative project that describes cognitive-behavioral techniques that have been demonstrated to be empirically effective and may be productively assimilated into dynamic psychotherapy.

    What is the warrant for symptom-focused interventions in psychodynamic treatment? Connors argues that the deleterious impact of symptoms on the patient's physical and emotional well being often impedes psychodynamic engagement.  Symptoms associated with addictive disorders, eating disorders, OCD, and posttraumatic stress receive special attention. With patients suffering from these and other symptoms, Connors finds, specific cognitive-behavior techniques may relieve symptomatic distress and facilitate a psychodynamic treatment process, with its attentiveness to the therapeutic relationship and the analysis of transference-countertransference.

    Connors' model of integrative psychotherapy, which makes cognitive-behavioral techniques responsive to a comprehensive understanding of symptom etiology, offers a balanced perspective that attends to the relational embeddedness of symptoms without skirting the therapeutic obligation to alleviate symptomatic distress. In fact, Connors shows, active techniques of symptom management are frequently facilitative of treatment goals formulated in terms of relational psychoanalysis, self psychology, intersubjectivity theory, and  attachment research. A discerning effort to enrich psychodynamic treatment without subverting its conceptual ground, Symptom-Focused Dynamic Psychotherapy is a bracing antidote to the timeworn mindset that makes a virtue of symptomatic suffering.  

    Preface. Rationale for a Symptom-Focused Dynamic Treatment. Active Techniques in a Context of Integrative Possibility. The Decision to Use Active Techniques. Cognitive Interventions. Behavioral Techniques. Suggestions for Intervention with Specific Symptoms. A Patient with Compulsive Behaviors. A Patient with Generalize Anxiety. A Patient with Binge Eating and Depression. A Patient with a Relational Dilemma.

    Biography

    A faculty memory of the Illinois School of Professional Psychology, Mary E. Connors, Ph.D., is Co-Director of Integrative Health Partners, a Chicago practice group dedicated to integrative treatment.

    “This is a book filled with uncommon clinical wisdom.  The interventions suggested by Connors are consistently informed by deep understanding of their meanings for the patient, and her attention to character, transference, and countertransference is masterful.  At the same time, she demonstrates clearly how the deeper aims of psychoanalytic work can be enhanced rather than compromised by thoughtful inclusion of methods whose origins lie outside the psychoanalytic tradition.  Connors is theoretically sophisticated, but it is the patient and his or her suffering, rather than theoretical ‘purity,’ that is the central focus of her work.”

    - Paul Wachtel, Ph.D., Distinguished Professor of Psychology, City College and CUNY Graduate Center

    Symptom-Focused Dynamic Psychotherapy integrates active, instructional, and cognitive-behavioral   techniques with psychodynamic principles in an impressively thoughtful, comprehensive, and compelling way. Grounding her synthesis in contemporary self-psychological and relational theory, Connors shows how the skilled application of symptom-focused techniques is often the most attuned, relationally responsive intervention a therapist can make.  Moreover, Connors’ conceptual clarity and clinical wisdom combine to make this book highly useable not only as a guide for experienced clinicians of various theoretical persuasions, but as a comprehensive text for graduate and professional students in the mental health fields.”

    - Steven Stern, Ph.D., Massachusetts Institute for Psychoanalysis

    “Connors’ writing reflects both rigorous scholarship and great personal warmth. The comprehensiveness of her treatment of her material and the clarity of her prose will be appreciated by teacher, student, and clinician alike.  It is also the particular gift of this volume that the working clinician is offered a pathway through which neither depth-psychological understanding nor symptom-focused relief has to be sacrificed in providing sound clinical care.”

    - Jill R. Gardner, Ph.D., University of Chicago

    "This volume might well be a valuable addition to the syllabus of a graduate course in which psychoanalytic or psychodynamic therapy is a central topic. The book is clearly written and well organized and is an accessible read..."
    - PsycCRITIQUES