ABSTRACT
Conjoint therapy of marital partners is a technique that lends itself to the counseling efforts of health professionals. Its growing use has, however, brought with it seemingly inevitable pitfalls, such as inadequate assessment of individual needs and psychopathology, overzealous application and disregard of certain contraindications, management problems and goal definition that may be unclear to patients or more related to the therapist's personality than to an objective view of the marriage dynamics. Despite the difficulties and pitfalls of this relatively new field, conjoint therapy can be the treatment of choice when the primary difficulties are related to the inability to cope in the marital situation, even though functioning in other social roles is adequate.
Subject(s)
Marital Therapy , Mental Disorders/therapy , Adult , Clinical Competence , Compulsive Personality Disorder , Confidentiality , Female , Humans , Male , Passive-Aggressive Personality Disorder , Personality , Problem Solving , Professional-Patient Relations , Schizoid Personality DisorderSubject(s)
Amphetamine/therapeutic use , Child Behavior Disorders/drug therapy , Intellectual Disability/complications , Movement Disorders/drug therapy , Thioridazine/therapeutic use , Aggression/drug effects , Attention/drug effects , Child , Clinical Trials as Topic , Humans , Interpersonal Relations/drug effects , Placebos , Psychological Tests , Psychology, ChildSubject(s)
Adaptation, Psychological , Anxiety Disorders/therapy , Veterans , Adult , Canada , Humans , MaleABSTRACT
Many traditional concepts are being challenged in contemporary psychiatric practice, including the classical "one-to-one" relationship of individual psychotherapy. Where the patient's presenting difficulties include significant inability to function or feel happy in the marital role, the technique of conjoint psychotherapy (having both partners treated simultaneously by the same doctor) may be indicated. Conjoint therapy is envisaged as a continuum, embracing a considerable range of situations where it is sound practice to see husband and wife together. The treatment plan has three stages: complaint, clarification, and compromise, each of which presents specific features and pitfalls. Emphasis is placed on dealing with individual psychopathology of each partner, both per se and in relation to the marital situation. Results to date suggest that conjoint treatment represents a promising therapeutic modality. Even in cases where individual psychopathology cannot fully be resolved, certain plateaus of satisfaction may be attained as communication improves.