Psychodynamic Therapy for Depression Grand Rapids MI
Gail G. Johnson, MSW, LMSW, ACSW
616-456-1178
Grand Rapids, MI
Christian Counseling Center
616-956-1122
Grand Rapids, MI
Michael Hamm ACSW LMSW CPT
616-454-2911
Grand Rapids, MI
Linda Schneider, LMSW
616-285-5778
Grand Rapids, MI
Marlene L. Lathrop, LMSW, BCD Behavioral Health Offices
616-942-4002
Grand Rapids, MI
Psychodynamic Therapy for Depression
Mental health professionals have many tools at their disposal to treat patients with depression, anxiety, and other mind disorders. Psychodynamic therapy is one of the oldest forms of psychological treatment, and one that some psychologists and social workers still use. If you took a basic psychology course in high school or college, you probably learned about Sigmund Freud and his theory that human behavior is driven primarily by unconscious motivations, or drivers. Freud is one of the founders of modern day psychodynamic therapy, also called talk therapy or free association. Psychodynamic therapy helps to explain behavior by understanding our subconscious, or unconscious, processes, and resolving conflicted feeling that linger from earlier life experiences that may (unbeknownst to us) produce maladaptive patterns of behavior. Four major schools of thought make up psychodynamic therapy.
According to psychologist Kathleen Holtz Deal, psychodynamic therapy treatment modalities lie along a continuum. At one end, the goal is to modify or change personality structures. At the other end of the continuum, therapy supports, enhances, and strengthens individual functioning. Ego supportive approaches focus on present situations and conscious processes to improve adaptive coping abilities, while ego modifying approaches use insight to understand unconscious conflicts and their effects on behavior to modify personality. Mental health professionals may use psychodynamic theory in conjunction with Cognitive Behavior Therapy (CBT), one of the most commonly used forms of treatment for depression. Where psychodynamic treatment focuses on, and emphasizes, unconscious motivations for behaviors, cognitive behavioral therapy is concerned with creating new, healthier behaviors, not understanding why we behavior in certain ways. There is evidence that psychodynamic theory helps patients suffering from depression, although there's no evidence that it is more or less effective than CBT or other forms of therapy. According to psychologist Renee Spencer, psychodynamic therapy works best for people who are curious about how their mind works and who believe that their internal life is worth taking the time to understand. Understanding the underlying theories of different types of mental health treatments will help you chose a therapist and a mode of treatment that is best for you. Sources DepressionGuide.com. "Psychodynamic Theory." Web... |




