TY - JOUR
T1 - The group analytic model
AU - Hopper, Earl
AU - Brown, Marion
AU - Friedman, Robi
AU - Godby, Dale C.
AU - Vincent, David
AU - Wilson, Peter
AU - Winther, Gerda
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The American Group Psychotherapy Association, Inc.
PY - 2017
Y1 - 2017
N2 - Drawing upon psychoanalysis, sociology, and group dynamics, the basic clinical model of group analysis was first described by Foulkes (1948, 1964) and Foulkes and Anthony (1964): Four men and four women, plus the conductor, sit around a small table and engage in free-floating conversation for a 90-minute session once a week. Groups might meet more often and be supplemented by combined or conjoint therapy (Maratos, 2000). All group members actively engage in treatment processes, but the conductor is responsible for monitoring and maintaining the boundaries of the group and facilitating the processes of clarification, translation, and interpretation. The conductor should resist being tempted to give personal information to patients and should not violate the boundaries of the group in ways that impede the development of the group and the individuals within it (Sharpe, 2005). Further descriptions of this model can be found in Roberts and Pines (1991).
AB - Drawing upon psychoanalysis, sociology, and group dynamics, the basic clinical model of group analysis was first described by Foulkes (1948, 1964) and Foulkes and Anthony (1964): Four men and four women, plus the conductor, sit around a small table and engage in free-floating conversation for a 90-minute session once a week. Groups might meet more often and be supplemented by combined or conjoint therapy (Maratos, 2000). All group members actively engage in treatment processes, but the conductor is responsible for monitoring and maintaining the boundaries of the group and facilitating the processes of clarification, translation, and interpretation. The conductor should resist being tempted to give personal information to patients and should not violate the boundaries of the group in ways that impede the development of the group and the individuals within it (Sharpe, 2005). Further descriptions of this model can be found in Roberts and Pines (1991).
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85034590468&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/00207284.2016.1218770
DO - 10.1080/00207284.2016.1218770
M3 - Article
C2 - 38449257
AN - SCOPUS:85034590468
SN - 0020-7284
VL - 67
SP - S79-S90
JO - International Journal of Group Psychotherapy
JF - International Journal of Group Psychotherapy
ER -