Clinical Social Work Treatment: How Does it Work?Bridging the gap between theory and practice, this work uses a psychoanalytic theory as a model, covering the various spheres of clinical social work treatment. Successful integration of concept and process is seen as an effective guideline for therapeutic promotion of individual growth. |
From inside the book
23 pages matching sharing of perceptions in this book
Where's the rest of this book?
Results 1-3 of 23
Contents
REALITY AND THE PERSONSITUATION | 13 |
Chapter III | 30 |
Chapter IV | 43 |
Copyright | |
9 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
ability able achieve active adolescence affective anger assumed attempt basic become behavior biologically inherited Blanche borderline boundaries capacity child client clinical social clinician complex concept concrete conscious considered countertransference course culture developmental differentiated ego psychology environment example existence experience experienced external world fact feedback feelings Flynn formulation Freud functioning fundamental Furthermore goal Hernstein homosexual human identity important indicated individual infant Ingram inner integrated interactions internal interpsychic space involved magical thinking manner Maria marriage meaning system mother narcissistic personality disorder natural environment nature normal object Oedipus complex operational organization parents pathology Patrick person physical Piaget pleasure Porter possible potential presumed primary problem professional psychoanalytic theory psychological reality relation relatively repression role schizophrenic seemed sense sexual sharing of perceptions significant situation social casework social worker superego symbolic therapeutic therapist thinking thought transitional treatment relationship unconscious understanding utilized Winnicott