The Psychotherapy of Schizophrenia 1980
DOI: 10.1007/978-1-4684-3770-6_9
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

The Nature of the Psychotic Experience and Its Implications for the Therapeutic Process

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
1
1
1
1

Citation Types

0
10
0
2

Year Published

1986
1986
2003
2003

Publication Types

Select...
7

Relationship

1
6

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 19 publications
(12 citation statements)
references
References 12 publications
0
10
0
2
Order By: Relevance
“…Such a world view is a marked contrast to the perceptions of many chronic patients for whom representations of self and others are fragmented and disorganized (Pepper and Ryglewicz, 1984) and who view rudimentary problem solving, much less complicated treatment planning, as an unintelligible maze (Harris and Bergman, 1984). For many chronic patients who lack a stable identity and a secure sense of self (Blatt, Shimek, and Brenneis, 1980), the integrated and reliable world view of the case manager offers a safe harbor in the storm of complicated and changing life events. It is just this world view that becomes available, during the case management relationship, for identification on the part of the patient.…”
Section: Modeling Healthy Behaviorsmentioning
confidence: 96%
“…Such a world view is a marked contrast to the perceptions of many chronic patients for whom representations of self and others are fragmented and disorganized (Pepper and Ryglewicz, 1984) and who view rudimentary problem solving, much less complicated treatment planning, as an unintelligible maze (Harris and Bergman, 1984). For many chronic patients who lack a stable identity and a secure sense of self (Blatt, Shimek, and Brenneis, 1980), the integrated and reliable world view of the case manager offers a safe harbor in the storm of complicated and changing life events. It is just this world view that becomes available, during the case management relationship, for identification on the part of the patient.…”
Section: Modeling Healthy Behaviorsmentioning
confidence: 96%
“…Extensivos hallazgos de la investigación y de informes clínicos, muestran que un rango amplio de sín-tomas y muchos de los disturbios cognitivos, preceptuales e interpersonales observados con frecuencia en la esquizofrenia, pueden ser entendidos como disrupciones en la capacidad de establecer y mantener límites (Blatt & Ritzler, 1974;Blatt & Wild, 1976), y de una inhabilidad de establecer y mantener constancia emocional (o de reconocimiento) en sus relaciones interpersonales (Blatt, Schimek & Brenneis, 1980). Las respuestas de contaminación en el Rorschach son un ejemplo primario del trastorno de límites en la esquizofrenia.…”
Section: Psicopatologíaunclassified
“…Dos formas principales de depresión (eso es, la dependiente y la autocrítica; Beck, 1983;Blatt, 1974;Blatt, D'Afflitti & Quinlan, 1976) y dos formas principales de desórdenes de personalidad (histeria y obsesión compulsiva; por ejemplo, Ouimette, Klein, Anderson, Riso & Lizard, 1994) pueden diferenciarse dependiendo de si los intereses y preocupaciones del individuo se centran primordialmente en temas de autodefinición (por ejemplo, temas de poder, control, autovalor) o en temas acerca de la disponibilidad y confiabilidad de los otros para el apoyo emocional (Blatt, 1991(Blatt, , 1995Blatt & Shichman, 1983). Así, varios estudios de representaciones mentales en muestras de casos clínicos han proporcionado nuevas formas de entender un rango amplio de psicopatología, incluyendo la esquizofrenia Blatt Schimek & Brenneis, 1980;Blatt & Wild, 1976;Blatt et al, 1975), la patología borderline Blatt, 1990;Blatt & Auerbach, 1988, Diamond et al, 1990Gruen & Blatt, 1990;Nigg, Lohr, Western, Gold & Silk, 1992;Western, Lohr, Silk, Gold & Kerber, 1990), la depresión (Blatt, 1974;Blatt & Homann, 1992;Blatt & Maroudas, 1992;Cicchetti & Aber, 1986;Homann, 1991;Zuroff & Fitzpatrick, 1995), y dos tipos principales de desórdenes de personalidad (Blatt, 1991(Blatt, , 1995Blatt & Shichman, 1983;Ouimette et al, 1994).…”
Section: Neurosis Y Depresiónunclassified
“…Integrating extensive research ®ndings and clinical reports, Blatt and Wild (1976) demonstrated that a wide range of symptoms and cognitive, perceptual, and interpersonal disturbances in schizophrenia can be understood as disruptions in the capacity to establish and maintain boundaries (Blatt and Ritzler, 1974) and emotional (or recognition) constancy (Blatt, Schimek and Brenneis, 1980). Additionally, many symptoms and impairments in borderline pathology can be understood as disturbances in the capacity to establish and maintain evocative and self-constancy (e.g.…”
Section: Implications For Psychopathologymentioning
confidence: 99%