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1.
J Clin Psychol ; 79(6): 1593-1603, 2023 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37132249

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: Most psychological treatments are administered in a one-to-one therapy format, which has proven effective but has limitations in complex clinical situations. Teamwork can help address these limitations by going beyond the one-to-one therapy approach and involving the client's professional and relational network in therapy interventions to promote and secure change. In this issue of Journal of Clinical Psychology: In Session five effective teamwork practices are presented illustrating how clinicians integrate teamwork into treatment delivery to improve outcomes in an array of cases presenting high complexity. PURPOSE: In this commentary section, we describe the role and essence of these teamwork practices from a systems thinking approach as a theoretical umbrella to understand the diversity of processes hindering and facilitating effective teamwork CONCLUSSION: From this approach we discuss the core skills that psychotherapists should train to master team working and interprofessional collaboration. The basic professional competence consists in the ability to foster and coordinate shared frames of understanding in case formulation. An advanced systemic skill is based on the ability to formulate and change relational patterns, given that interpersonal processes are the main key factor to understand barriers and facilitators of effective teamwork to overcome stalemated complex clinical situations.


Subject(s)
Professional Competence , Psychotherapy , Humans , Systems Analysis , Interprofessional Relations , Cooperative Behavior
2.
J Clin Psychol ; 79(6): 1515-1520, 2023 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37009753

ABSTRACT

This in-session issue is focused on psychotherapists involved in and performing teamwork practices. Specifically, five teamwork-based psychotherapy interventions are illustrated as solutions for complex clinical situations drawing from multiple theoretical approaches (narrative, systemic, cognitive behavioral, and integrative) and applied in different health care provision settings, ranging from psychotherapy private office to a multidisciplinary oncological service. The contributions try to cover a diversity of presenting problems: separating couples, gang involvement, schizophrenia, cancer and suicidal ideation, bipolar disorder; and formats of delivery such as couple therapy supervision, family therapy, multidisciplinary team formulation and interprofessional health psychology. Three main shared coordinates underlie the diversity of interventions: (1) Considering that psychotherapy is just a piece of a broader network of interactions and meanings generated around a given problem/solution and, thus, it is part of an ecology of ideas (ecological dimension), (2) Assuming interdependence and collaboration as the best strategies to interact with professionals and significant others involved with a given problem or solution (collaborative dimension), and (3) fostering a strengths-based case formulation (epistemological dimension). The issue aims at enriching practitioners' toolbox willing to incorporate team-based interventions as part of their range of professional competences.


Subject(s)
Bipolar Disorder , Couples Therapy , Humans , Psychotherapy , Family Therapy , Psychotherapists , Interprofessional Relations
3.
J Clin Psychol ; 79(6): 1572-1592, 2023 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36896875

ABSTRACT

Even in well-delivered treatments, a significant proportion of patients with severe diagnoses will not achieve sustained remission. For example, research demonstrates that in Bipolar II disorder, while psychological interventions combined with pharmacotherapy yield much better results than pharmacotherapy alone, relapse rates remain very high. In this article, we show the successful treatment of Mrs. C., who was diagnosed with Bipolar II disorder and fell into the non-responders. The treatment integrated a novel approach grounded on a cognitive-behavioral theory with a systemic perspective. The psychotherapist, the psychiatrist, and a family therapist composed the teamwork and delivered the treatment in three phases. In the first phase, the psychotherapist conjointly with the psychiatrist aimed at reducing symptoms. In the second phase, the psychotherapist and the family therapist addressed the dysfunctional relationship patterns that negatively reinforced emotional dysregulation. Finally, in the third phase, the aim was to consolidate the achievements, changes, and good outcomes.


Subject(s)
Bipolar Disorder , Humans , Bipolar Disorder/therapy , Mental Health , Treatment Outcome
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