Can research influence clinical practice?
Author
Abstract
After briefl y reviewing the unfavourable reception accorded empirical research by
parts of the psychoanalytic community, as well as some of the benefi ts to clinical
practice of analysts being involved in research activities, the author examines whether
the fi ndings of process and outcome research in psychotherapy and psychoanalysis
can help identify the most appropriate forms of intervention for producing therapeutic
change, given the specifi c condition of the patient and the relationship that the
individual establishes with the analyst. He argues that research fi ndings can infl uence
clinical practice on various levels and in different areas, and goes on to examine
a number of related issues: the specifi city of therapeutic interventions versus the
relevance of common curative factors; the dyadic conception of technique and ways
of understanding the therapeutic action of the treatment alliance; and the strategic or
heuristic conception in psychoanalytic therapy. Finally, the author presents clinical
material with the aim of illustrating how the knowledge acquired through research
can be applied to psychoanalytic treatment.
Quote Item
The International Journal of Psychoanalysis, Volume 88, Issue 3, p. 661-679, june, 2007
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