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Journal Article

Citation

Flynn D. J. Child Psychother. 1998; 24(2): 283.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1998, Informa - Taylor and Francis Group)

DOI

10.1080/00754179808414818

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

This paper looks at the experience of inpatient hospital treatment at the Cassel Hospital and how formal psychoanalytic psychotherapy, with its emphasis on the transference and the inner world, fits into that context and orientates itself to some of the realities of the setting. It outlines how psychotherapy and nursing can work to inform and enrich each other, and what is psychoanalytic about the overall work. A bridge of understanding is built using the patients' perceptions of, adjustment to and conflict about the inpatient setting, and the affective impact of the processes on patients and staff alike. Two clinical examples of severe child abuse family cases are given, the first of Munchhausen syndrome by proxy, the second in which a baby sibling had been killed. They show how in-depth psychoanalytic work with mother and child and individual psychotherapy of the child can be combined with psychotherapy of the parents and intensive work in the therapeutic community. Such a combination can contribute, even in cases of severe pathology, to the development of the relationship between mother and child and promote successful rehabilitation in the outside community.

Keywords: Inpatient psychotherapy; psychosocial nursing; Cassel Hospital; Munchhausen syndrome by proxy; severe psychopathology

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