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Getting the Most Out of Therapy: How to Collaborate With Your Therapist
If you are in therapy, you and your therapist have already invested a significant amount of time and energy into your work, and you both have the same goal in mind: helping you achieve your own objectives for emotional growth and healing. If and when a difference of opinion over the treatment does occur, rather than walking away from your therapist, it is usually well worth the effort try to find a collaborative way to again go forward.More -
How to REALLY Talk to your Therapist: Four Collaborative Steps
Communicating with your therapist is the key to get the most out of your therapy. This article will discuss steps on how to REALLY talk to your therapist.More -
Serious Problems in Psychotherapy Require Serious Medicine
As a psychotherapy patient, do you wonder whether the work you and your therapist are doing will succeed and produce lasting results? Patients frequently remain in the dark about whether treatment is actually succeeding. The solution to this dilemma is a treatment considerably broader in scope than conventional psychological and psychiatric therapy. In conducting this innovative method of treatment, the therapist assumes the kind of clinical responsibility that is typical of a physician. He or she takes responsibility for addressing the full range of the patient's presenting and underlying problems, and coordinating all aspects of the patient's treatment. More -
Improving Accuracy in Mental Health
Decisions in mental health treatment are often relatively subjective and clinical judgment is prone to errors. But must it be that way? More
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