TY - BOOK AU - Mackie,Belinda S. TI - Treating people with psychosis in institutions: a psychoanalytic perspective SN - 9781782414735 AV - RC504 .T743 2016 PY - 2016/// CY - London PB - Karnac Books KW - Psychoanalysis KW - Mentally ill KW - Institutional care KW - Psychoses KW - Treatment KW - Psychoanalytic interpretation KW - Psychiatric hospitals KW - Medical care KW - Specialty hospitals KW - Psychotherapy KW - Therapeutics KW - National health services KW - Mental illness KW - Hospitals KW - Health facilities KW - Electronic Books N1 - 2; COVER; Contents; Acknowledgments; About the author; Preface; Introduction; Chapter One Psychiatry and the influenceof psychoanalysis; Chapter Two Psychoanalytic approaches to the treatment of psychosis; Chapter Three The origin of psychoanalysis in institutions; Chapter Four Group organisation and the social system; Chapter Five Psychoanalysis and institutional models; Chapter Six Hospital based individual treatment; Chapter Seven Institutions oriented to Freud and Lacan; Chapter Eight The therapeutic community; Chapter Nine Institutional approaches with children and adolescents; Conclusion; 2; b N2 - This book brings together the histories of a number of psychoanalytically-informed hospitals, and provides a synthesis of the theoretical underpinnings in the institutional practice of each. Of particular interest is how psychoanalysts and psychoanalytically-trained staff working in institutions apply their theoretical understanding, and in what ways the psychoanalytic technique has been modified or adapted to the treatment of individual patients with psychosis and to the workings of an institution in general. Here the institution is the subject of the case study. Institutions that are theoretically orientated to psychoanalysis were chosen and examined, taking into account their various approaches to the treatment. A number of institutional models that are informed by psychoanalysis offer a guide to the treatment and present a version of institutional practice that is different from the prevailing models in psychiatry. This has implications for health services in the current climate of mental health reform. Psychoanalysis has its greatest efficacy in long-term treatments and has shown its suitability for patients diagnosed with psychosis when the method is adapted to the uniqueness of each person and is conducted by an experienced clinician. The treatment of psychosis cannot usually be conceived without considering some form of institutional care, although this does depend on the level of the individual's psychopathology. This is because the majority of people with a psychotic illness, especially those with schizophrenia, will be exposed to inpatient, community or outpatient treatment, in one form or other, during the course of their lives UR - https://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&scope=site&db=nlebk&db=nlabk&AN=1135092&site=eds-live&custid=s3260518 ER -