Promoting Behavioral Change in Psychoanalytic Treatments.

Fredric N Busch
Author Information
  1. Fredric N Busch: Clinical Professor of Psychiatry, Weill Cornell Medical College, Faculty, Columbia University Center for Psychoanalytic Training and Research, New York.

Abstract

One of the shibboleths of psychoanalysis is that treatment should not target behavioral change, focusing instead on gaining insight and the therapeutic relationship (Freud, 1917; 1923; Gabbard, 2014; Greenson, 1967). Such an approach is believed to be accompanied by disruptions of exploration or problematic distortions of the transference (Freud, 1917; 1923; Gabbard, 2014; Greenson, 1967). However, ignoring behavioral change can put patients at increased risk for stalemates in treatment and persistent problematic behaviors that interfere with improvement and impair relationships. This article suggests that rather than being at odds or disruptive, efforts at behavioral change can be part of the development and employment of a psychodynamic formulation, and can be used to enhance self-understanding and exploration of the transference. Psychoanalytic approaches provide strategies for behavioral change not included in other psychotherapeutic treatments. This article describes a variety of ways in which efforts at behavioral change can be integrated with and enhanced by psychodynamic exploration.

Keywords

MeSH Term

Anxiety
Depression
Female
Humans
Male
Middle Aged
Outcome and Process Assessment, Health Care
Problem Behavior
Psychoanalytic Therapy

Word Cloud

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