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Wallerstein, R.S. (2000). Forty-Two Lives in Treatment: A Study of Psychoanalysis and Psychotherapy. New York: The Analytic P..

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Wallerstein, R.S. (2000). Forty-Two Lives in Treatment: A Study of Psychoanalysis and Psychotherapy. , 1-768. New York: The Analytic Press.

Forty-Two Lives in Treatment: A Study of Psychoanalysis and Psychotherapy

Robert S. Wallerstein, M.D. Author Information

Contents

Preface to the Softcover Edition xi
Preface xix
Section I. Preview and Rationale
1. The Conception and Purpose of This Volume 5
2. The Congruence of Observation and Conclusion: Comments on Earlier Publications 14
3. Conducting and Describing a Long- Term Psychotherapy Study: Questions and Issues 28
Section II. Overview and Organization: The Problem, the Methods, the Design
4. Questions and Basic Premises of the Project 47
5. Selection and Characteristics of the Patient Group 56
6. The Three Phases of the Project 71
7. Procedural Aspects of the Project 102
Section III. The Patients and Their Characteristics
8. Symptoms and Illness Configurations 121
9. Issues of Diagnosis and Implications for Treatment 158
- vii -

Section IV. The Treatments and Their Characteristics
10. Treatment Modality: Plans and Changes 185
11. Treatment Setting and Context 215
12. Therapist and Patient Factors Affecting Treatment 236
Section V. The Treatment Course: The Processes of Psychoanalysis and Expressive Psychotherapy
13. Analytic Cures 265
14. Varieties of the Transference Neurosis 278
15. The Analysis of the Hysterical Patient: Limitations? 293
16. Analysis of a Narcissistic Patient 321
17. The “Transference Psychosis” 329
18. Other Psychotic Treatment and Posttreatment Reactions 344
Section VI. The Treatment Course: The Processes of Expressive-Supportive Psychotherapy
19. The Expressive Psychotherapeutic Mode 373
20. Supportive Psychotherapy: Varieties of the Positive Dependent Transference 389
21. Supportive Psychotherapy: Other Supportive Mechanisms 451
22. “Rescue” by Factors Other than Psychotherapy 489
Section VII. The Treatment Courses and Outcomes: Overviews
23. Overall Treatment Results 513
24. Changes in HSRS Ratings and Changes in IQ 529
25. Turning Points in Treatments 540
26. Treatment Disruption by External Pressures 550
27. Treatment Failures and “Untreatable” Patients 561
28. The Patients' Marital Families: Problems, Changes, and Treatments 573

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