Choosing a patient for Psychodynamic Psychotherapy by Dr Neil Jayasingam

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  • Опубликовано: 23 июл 2024
  • Dr. Neil Jayasingam is a former research scholar of the Institute of Psychiatry (Sydney) and Institute of Psychiatry (UK) and specializes in phenomenology and personality disorders in the elderly. In public practice, he is the in-patient clinical lead for an old-age psychiatry service, as well as ECT Clinical Director. He is also the Binational New South Wales Representative for the Faculty of Old Age Psychiatry, a Foundation Accredited Member of the Royal Australian and New Zealand Psychotherapy Faculty, a Clinical Lecturer with Sydney University, and Senior Lecturer with Western Sydney University.
    Take-Home Points
    • Psychodynamic therapy must be a useful training experience for the therapist as well as leading to some beneficial outcome for the patient.
    • Patients with psychotic disorders are usually not motivated enough to respond to psychodynamic therapy.
    • Interpretation at the early onset is about identifying a pattern and repeating it back to the patient to see how they respond.
    Full article: psychscenehub.com/video/choos...

Комментарии • 17

  • @LauraH-hh2um
    @LauraH-hh2um 3 года назад +4

    Really enjoyed your training. It was quite interesting and thought provoking for me. Thanks, Dr. Jayasingam.

  • @lilacfla
    @lilacfla 3 года назад +2

    I find his speech clear and direct. Thank u.

  • @mr.anindyabanerjee9905
    @mr.anindyabanerjee9905 3 года назад +3

    Very truly said that the initial prognostic indicator of this therapy is worsening of symptoms. Very well explained, but too precise. Please make a separate presentation on Transference-Focussed Psychodynamic Psychotherapy.

  • @jprince3
    @jprince3 2 года назад +1

    great stuff here, great speaker, thank you

  • @iamrubenmes
    @iamrubenmes 2 года назад +2

    Absolutely gold

  • @THEGAMERXLIVE
    @THEGAMERXLIVE 3 года назад +3

    Can patients with Asperger's syndrome do well in psychodynamic therapy? Not necessarily to treat the symptoms of Aspergers but for other issues they're experiencing.

    • @PsychiatrySimplified
      @PsychiatrySimplified  3 года назад +3

      Yes there is evidence for psychodynamic therapy in Asperger's. E.g mentalisation therapy or to address other aspects such as rigidity, perfectionism, depression or anxiety.

    • @PsychiatrySimplified
      @PsychiatrySimplified  3 года назад +1

      @wizard101 account trader
      1. Cohler BJ, Weiner T. The Inner Fortress : Symptom and Meaning in Asperger’s Syndrome. Psychoanalytic Inquiry
      This article shows that psychodynamic perspectives are particularly relevant in working with people who have Asperger’s syndrome (AS). It is believed that a central problem among people with AS is difficulty in understanding their own mind and the mind of others. Recent discussion of factors involved in fostering change in psychoanalytic psychotherapy stresses the importance of a theory of mind, known as mentalization, that refers to the effort by the therapist to understand the patient’s mind. It is in this demonstration of the activity of coming to know the mind of another that psychodynamic perspectives may be particularly helpful in working with persons with AS to come to understand their own mind and to know the minds of others. Psychodynamic psychotherapy is also important in helping persons with AS to deal with difficulties and frustrations that they have encountered in their life.

  • @jacekmacek7097
    @jacekmacek7097 3 года назад +1

    lol...i had 3 years of this therappy, and i felt wors but never better. I fell much wors than before therappy and it is like 10 years right now. I have ruminations etc...

    • @PsychiatrySimplified
      @PsychiatrySimplified  3 года назад +1

      Thank you for your feedback. Psychodynamic therapy may not be indicated in all patients and can result in worsening of some symptoms in some patients. Therapy recruits a number of frontal lobe functions.

    • @jacekmacek7097
      @jacekmacek7097 3 года назад

      @@PsychiatrySimplified
      You know what? Your "sterile" correct chat is fantastic. It sound really great...
      "May not be indicated in all patients"- just perfect diplomatic sentence. "..may not.."(or may) ", can.."(or can not). "some symptoms"..." some patients" lol. This is all of you. You will write something like this irrelevant bulshiet with no content and everything is ok. You think you wrote anything? I will write you how i see your answear.
      "We are therapo-centrics, and we dont really care about people, we care about ideology. Thank you for your message which we dont give a shiet. Have a nice day:)"..this is who you are

    • @Red_pine
      @Red_pine 3 года назад

      @@jacekmacek7097 lmao this reaction. Good luck with your life Jacek

    • @PsychiatrySimplified
      @PsychiatrySimplified  3 года назад +1

      Sorry to hear. Psychotherapy can have side effects. It is also important to consider if there are biological aspects that need to be treated that may not respond to psychotherapy or may get worse. E.g ruminations or obsessive thoughts as part of melancholic depression may get worse or may not respond. Biological Rx is needed - hence taking a bio-psycho-social approach. Side effects of psychotherapy - psychscenehub.com/psychinsights/the-side-effects-of-psychotherapy/

    • @dan-arebjrngrnvik3513
      @dan-arebjrngrnvik3513 Год назад

      I know this is a bit late, but have you heard of the book "The bad Object" by Jeffery Seinfeld?
      He writes on people who have a negative result in therapy and how to overcome it.