Group psychotherapy is a form of psychotherapy in which one or more therapists treat a small group of clients together as a group. Psychotherapy is an Interpersonal, relational intervention used by trained psychotherapists to aid clients in problems of living The term can legitimately refer to any form of psychotherapy when delivered in a group format, including Cognitive behavioural therapy or Interpersonal therapy, but it is usually applied to psychodynamic group therapy where the group context and group process is explictly utilised as a mechanism of change by developing, exploring and examining interpersonal relationships within the group. See also Cognitive Therapy Cognitive Behavioral Therapy ( CBT) is an umbrella-term for psychotherapeutic systems that deal with cognitions interpretations Interpersonal Psychotherapy (IPT is a time-limited Psychotherapy that focuses on the interpersonal context and on building interpersonal skills The broader concept of group therapy can be taken to include any helping process that takes place in a group, including support groups, skills training groups (such as anger management, mindfulness, relaxation training or social skills training), and psycho-education groups. Therapy (in Greek: θεραπεία) or treatment, is the attempted Remediation of a health problem usually following a Diagnosis In a support group, members provide each other with various types of help usually nonprofessional and nonmaterial for a particular shared usually burdensome characteristic Anger Management is a 2003 Comedy film which starred Adam Sandler and Jack Nicholson, was directed by Peter Segal Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy ( MBCT) is a method of therapy which blends features of two disciplines Cognitive therapy aims to identify A Relaxation technique (also known as Relaxation training) is any method process procedure or activity that helps a person to relax to attain a state of increased calmness Social Skills are a group of skills which people need to interact and communicate with others Psychoeducation refers to the education offered to people who live with a psychological disturbance The differences between psychodynamic groups, activity groups, support groups, problem-solvong and psycoeducational groups are discussed by Momtgomery (2002). [1]. Other, more specialised forms of group therapy would include non-verbal expressive therapies such as dance therapy, music therapy or the TaKeTiNa Rhythm Process. Expressive therapy, also known as creative arts therapy is the use of the Creative arts as a form of Therapy. Dance therapy, or dance movement therapy is the psychotherapeutic use of movement (and Dance) for emotional Cognitive, Social, behavioural Music therapy is an interpersonal process in which the therapist uses music and all of its facets&mdashphysical emotional mental social aesthetic and spiritual&mdashto help clients to improve The TaKeTiNa Rhythm Process, developed by Austrian percussionist Reinhard Flatischler, is a musical
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Quoted with permission is the report of one client:
In group therapy the interactions between the members of the group and the therapists become the material with which the therapy is conducted, alongside past experiences and experiences outside the therapeutic group. These interactions are not necessarily as positive as reported as above, as the problems which the client experiences in daily life will also show up in his or her interactions in the group. Nevertheless, this allows such problems to be worked through in a therapeutic setting, generating experiences which may be translated to "real life. " Group therapy is not based on a single psychotherapeutic theory, but takes from many what works.
Some of the many benefits of group therapy:
Depending on where you live, you might be able to access group therapy therough a public mental health service or through a private practitioner. You can ask your individual therpist, psychiatrist or case manager for further information or to make a referral. Alternatively you can contact a training institute such as the Institute of Group Analysis in the UK or the American Group Psychotherapy Associaltion in the USA, who will have information about group therapy providers. Training institutes can sometimes offer reduced fee therapy with supervised trainee therapists.
This can vary according to the therpists approach. In general, however, you would be expected to make a commitment to attend a certain minimum number of sessions, and you would be expected to attend regularly once a week (or twice a week in some instances). Group sessions typically run for 90 minutes. There are not many rules for group members, but group members are expected to respect the confidentiality of fellow patients, and not have relationsips with other members outside the group. You can participate in your own way at your own pace, but it is generally helpful to share your own thoughts, feelings and experiences, and to take an active interest in other members. The group therapist will usually encourage your participation, and comment on interactions and relationships in the group sessions. If you find something difficult or unpleasant in a group session you should do your best to talk openly about it in the group, because wotking through these challenges is a big part of the therapy process. [1]
The founders of group psychotherapy in the USA were Joseph H. Pratt, Trigant Burrow and Paul Schilder. Trigant Burrow, (September 7 1875 - May 24 1950 was a American Psychoanalyst, Psychiatrist, Psychologist, and alongside Joseph H Austrian doctor and researcher Was born in Vienna in 1886 Graduated there in medicine in 1909 All three of them were active and working at the East Coast in first half of the 20th century. After World War II group psychotherapy was further developed by Jacob L. Moreno, Samuel Slavson, Hyman Spotnitz, Irvin Yalom,and Lou Ormont. Dr Jacob Levy Moreno (born Bucharest, Romania, May 18 1889; died New York, USA, May 14 Hyman Spotnitz ( September 29, 1908 - April 18, 2008) was an American Psychoanalyst and Psychiatrist who pioneered Irvin David Yalom (b June 13th 1931 in Washington DC MD is an author of fiction and nonfiction Emeritus Professor of Psychiatry at Stanford University, Yalom's approach to group therapy has been very influential not only in the USA but across the world, through his classic text "The Theory and Practice of Group Psychotherapy". [2] Moreno developed a specific and highly structured form of group therapy known as Psychodrama. Psychodrama is a form of human development which explores through dramatic action the problems issues concerns dreams and highest aspirations of people groups systems and organizations
In the United Kingdom group psychotherapy initially developed independently, with pioneers S. H. Foulkes and Wilfred Bion using group therapy as an approach to treating combat fatigue in the Second World War. Siegfried Heinrich Foulkes (1898-1976 born Siegfried Heinrich Fuchs in Karlsruhe Germany was the founder of Group Analysis, a specific form of Group therapy Wilfred Ruprecht Bion DSO (8 September 1897-8 November 1979 was a British psychoanalyst. [3] Foulkes and Bion were psychoanalysts and incorporated psychoanalysis into group therapy by recognising that transference can arise not only between group members and the therapist but also among group members. Furthermore the psychoanalytic concept of the unconscious was extended with a recognition of a group unconscious, in which the unconscious processes of group members could be acted out in the form of irrational processes in group sessions. Foulkes developed the model known as Group Analysis and the Institute of Group Analysis, while Bion was influenial in the development of group therapy at the Tavistock Clinic. Group Analysis is a method of Group psychotherapy originated by S The Institute of Group Analysis is a training organisation for group psychotherapists in the analytical tradition based on the groundwork begun by S See Tavistock Institute for the independent charity focussing on group relations Bion has been criticised, for example by Yalom,[4] for his technical approach which had an exclusive focus on analysis of whole-group processes to the exclusion of any exploration of indvidual group members' issues. Despite this, his recognition of group defences in the "Basic Assumption Group", has been highly influential. [5][6]
Bion's approach is comparable to Social Therapy, first developed in the United States in the late 1970's by Lois Holzman and Fred Newman, which is a group therapy in which practitioners relate to the group, not its individuals, as the fundamental unit of development. Social Therapy is an activity-theoretic practice developed outside of academia at the East Side Institute for Group and Short Term Psychotherapy in New York Lois Holzman is a cofounder with Fred Newman of the East Side Institute for Group and Short Term Psychotherapy and the Institute's current director Fred Newman is a philosopher psychotherapist playwright and political activist and creator of a therapeutic modality called Social Therapy. The task of the group is to "build the group" rather than focus on problem solving or "fixing" individuals.
Yalom's therapeutic factors (originally termed curative factors but re-named therapeutic factors in the 5th edition of 'The Theory and Practice of Group Psychotherapy'[7] are derived from extensive self-report research with users of group therapy[8][9]
Group therapy can form part of the therapeutic milieu of a psychiatric in-patient unit [11] [12]or ambulatory psychiatric Partial Hospitalisation (also known as Day Hospital treatment). Milieu Therapy is a form of Psychotherapy that involves the use of therapeutic Communities. Partial hospitalization is a type of program used to treat Mental illness and Substance abuse. [13] In addition to classical "talking" therapy, group therpy in an institutional setting can also include group-based expressive therapies such as drama therapy, psychodrama, art therapy, and non-verbal types of therapy such as music therapy. Expressive therapy, also known as creative arts therapy is the use of the Creative arts as a form of Therapy. Dramatherapy (often written drama therapy in the United States is the use of theatre techniques to facilitate personal growth and promote health Psychodrama is a form of human development which explores through dramatic action the problems issues concerns dreams and highest aspirations of people groups systems and organizations Art therapy is a form of Expressive therapy that uses art materials such as paints chalk and markers Music therapy is an interpersonal process in which the therapist uses music and all of its facets&mdashphysical emotional mental social aesthetic and spiritual&mdashto help clients to improve Group psychotherapy is a key component of Milieu Therapy in a Therapeutic Community. Milieu Therapy is a form of Psychotherapy that involves the use of therapeutic Communities. Therapeutic community is a term applied to a participative group-based approach to long-term Mental illness and/or Drug addiction that includes group psychotherapy The total environment or milieu is regarded as the medium of therapy, all interactions and activities regarded as potentially therapeutic and are subject to exporation and interpretation, and are explored in daily or weekly community meetings[14]
There is clear evidence for the effectiveness of group psychotherapy for depression: a meta-analysis of 48 studies showed an overall effect size of 1. Major depressive disorder, also known as major depression, unipolar depression, unipolar disorder, clinical depression, or simply depression In Statistics, a meta-analysis combines the results of several studies that address a set of related research hypotheses In Statistics, effect size is a measure of the strength of the relationship between two variables 03, which is clinically highly significant. [15] Similarly, a meta-analysis of five studies of group psychotherapy for adult sexual abuse survivors showed moderate to strong effect sizes [16], and there is also good evidence for effectiveness with chronic traumatic stress in war veterans. Child sexual abuse is a form of Child abuse in which a child is abused for the sexual gratification of an adult or older adolescent Post traumatic stress disorder It is a severe and ongoing emotional reaction to [17] There is less robust evidence of good outcomes for patients with borderline personality disorder, with some studies showing only small to moderate effect sizes. Borderline personality disorder ( BPD) is a psychiatric diagnosis in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders ( DSM-IV Personality [18] The authors comment that these poor outcomes might reflect a need for additional support for some patients, in addition to the group therapy. This is borne out by the impressive results obtained using Mentalization based treatment, a model which combines dynamic group psychotherapy with individual psychotherapy and case management. Mentalization-based treatment (MBT is an innovative form of Psychodynamic psychotherapy, developed and manualised by Peter Fonagy and Anthony Bateman [19] Most outcome research is carried out using time-limited therapy with diagnostically homogenous groups, however long-term intensive interactional group psychotherapy [20]assumes diverse and diagnostically heterogenous group membership, and an open-ended time scale for therapy. Good outcomes have also been demonstrated for this form of group therapy. [21]