All Stories

  1. The meaning and feeling of the time and space between psychotherapy sessions and everyday life: Client experiences of transitions
  2. Deadlock in psychotherapy: a phenomenological study of eight psychodynamic therapists' experiences
  3. New skills for distance regulation: Therapists’ experiences of remote psychotherapy following the COVID-19 pandemic.
  4. Understanding psychoanalytic work online and back to the couch in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic: an investigation among Italian psychoanalysts
  5. It turned into something else: patients’ long-term experiences of transitions to or from telepsychotherapy during the COVID-19 pandemic
  6. Accessibility at What Price? Therapists’ Experiences of Remote Psychotherapy with Children and Adolescents During the COVID-19 Pandemic
  7. How much time does psychoanalysis take? The duration of psychoanalytic treatments from Freud’s cases to the Swedish clinical practice of today
  8. Therapeutic encounters at the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic: psychodynamic therapists’ experiences of transition to remote psychotherapy
  9. Patient Experiences of Transition to Remote TherapyFollowing the Onset of COVID-19 Pandemic
  10. Obituary: Imre Szecsödy
  11. OBITUARY
  12. When ‘good outcome’ does not correspond to ‘good therapy’: Reflections on discrepancies between outcome scores and patients’ therapy satisfaction
  13. Unsuccessful psychotherapies: When and how do treatments fail?
  14. Deadlock in psychotherapy: A phenomenological study of eight psychodynamic therapists’ experiences
  15. Editorial: Unsuccessful Psychotherapies: When and How Do Treatments Fail?
  16. Am I really bipolar? Personal accounts of the experience of being diagnosed with bipolar II disorder
  17. Patients’ Experiences of Change in Psychoanalysis in relation to their personality orientation
  18. Successful and Less Successful Psychotherapies Compared: Three Therapists and Their Six Contrasting Cases
  19. “The Skin is the Cradle of the Soul”: Didier Anzieu on the Skin-Ego, Boundaries, and Boundlessness
  20. Correction to: Matching Patient and Therapist Anaclitic–Introjective Personality Configurations Matters for Psychotherapy Outcomes
  21. Early therapeutic process related to dropout in mentalization-based treatment with dual diagnosis patients.
  22. “It was like having half of the patient in therapy”: Therapists of nonimproved patients looking back on their work
  23. Matching Patient and Therapist Anaclitic–Introjective Personality Configurations Matters for Psychotherapy Outcomes
  24. “It was hard work every session”: Therapists’ view of successful psychoanalytic treatments
  25. Personality; Relatedness; Self-definition; Outcomes; Psychoanalytic psychotherapy; Young adults
  26. Relational therapists’ experiences of patients who occupy their inner world
  27. Changes in Self-Representations Following Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy for Young Adults
  28. Fostering change in personality configurations: Anaclitic and introjective patients in psychoanalysis.
  29. The art of freedom: Seven psychoanalytic theses on creativity and boundarie
  30. Shame and Gender Differences in Paths to Youth Suicide
  31. Secure attachment to therapist, alliance, and outcome in psychoanalytic psychotherapy with young adults.
  32. “Spinning one's wheels”: Nonimproved patients view their psychotherapy
  33. Changes in anaclitic–introjective personality dimensions, outcomes and psychoanalytic technique: a multi-case study
  34. Dropout revisited: Patient- and therapist-initiated discontinuation of psychotherapy as a function of organizational instability
  35. Patient Attachment to Therapist Rating Scale
  36. Emile, or on Devastation: When Virtual Boundlessness Meets Inner Emptiness
  37. Not starting psychotherapy is more often initiated by the therapist than the patient
  38. Patient Attachment to Therapist Rating Scale: Development and psychometric properties
  39. Therapist and relationship factors influencing dropout from individual psychotherapy: A literature review
  40. Shame Behind the Masks: The Parents' Perspective on Their Sons' Suicide
  41. Successful psychotherapies with young adults: an explorative study of the participants' view
  42. Everyday evidence: Outcomes of psychotherapies in Swedish public health services.
  43. Dissatisfied psychotherapy patients: A tentative conceptual model grounded in the participants' view
  44. Professional development and psychotherapy supervision
  45. The victim's shame: The parents’ perspective on their daughters’ committed suicide
  46. Editorial
  47. Predictors of not starting and dropping out from psychotherapy in Swedish public service settings
  48. Poster #149 FACIAL AFFECTIVE EXPRESSIVENESS IN PATIENTS WITH SCHIZOPHRENIA
  49. Long-term outcomes of psychodynamic residential treatment for severely disturbed young adults: A naturalistic study at a Swedish therapeutic community
  50. Personality-related responses to the psychoanalytic process: A systematic multicase study.
  51. Stability of Facial Affective Expressions in Schizophrenia
  52. Vicissitudes of ideas of cure in analysands and their analysts: A longitudinal interview study
  53. Changes in self and object representations following psychotherapy measured by a theory-free, computational, semantic space method
  54. Interplay of gaze behaviour and facial affectivity in schizophrenia
  55. Young adults talk about their problems
  56. Changes in the representations of mother and father among young adults in psychoanalytic psychotherapy.
  57. Therapists' view of therapeutic action in psychoanalytic psychotherapy with young adults.
  58. From psychoanalytic narrative to empirical single case research: Implications for psychoanalytic practice
  59. Experiences of overcoming depression in young adults in psychoanalytic psychotherapy
  60. Long‐term outcome and post‐treatment effects of psychoanalytic psychotherapy with young adults
  61. Minding the gap between clinical practice and empirical research in psychoanalysis
  62. Patients' Views of Therapeutic Action in Psychoanalytic Group Psychotherapy
  63. Utopic ideas of cure and joint exploration in psychoanalytic supervision
  64. Ideas of cure as a predictor of premature termination, early alliance and outcome in psychoanalytic psychotherapy
  65. Young adults' ideas of cure prior to psychoanalytic psychotherapy
  66. Young adults in psychoanalytic psychotherapy: Patient characteristics and therapy outcome
  67. Communicating with patients with schizophrenia: characteristics of well functioning and poorly functioning communication
  68. Two sets of private theories in analysands and their analysts: Utopian versus attainable cures.
  69. The patient's private and canons of science: Freud's case studies Noch einmal
  70. The patient's private construction of meaning and canons of science: Freud's case studiesnoch einmal
  71. PRIVATE THEORIES AND PSYCHOTHERAPEUTIC TECHNIQUE
  72. Understanding the incomprehensible: Private theories of first–episode psychotic patients and their therapists
  73. A Model of Therapeutic Action Grounded in the Patients' View of Curative and Hindering Factors in Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy.
  74. Different views of a psychotic breakdown - complementary perspectives of a bewildering experience
  75. ‘The meaning of dreams in the psychotic state: Theoretical considerations and clinical applications’ by Paola Capozzi and Franco De Masi
  76. 'THE MEANING OF DREAMS IN THE PSYCHOTIC STATE: THEORETICAL CONSIDERATIONS AND CLINICAL APPLICATIONS' BY PAOLA CAPOZZI AND FRANCO DE MASI
  77. The dialectics of psychoanalytic research
  78. The future of psychotherapeutic environments: Learning from experience at a Swedish therapeutic community
  79. The ‘living dead’ — Survivors of torture and psychosis
  80. Exploration and support in psychotherapeutic environments for psychotic patients
  81. Organization; psychosis, therapeutic community, treatment philosophy
  82. Psychotherapy research between process and effect: the need of new methodological approaches