Description |
1 online resource (348 pages) |
Contents |
Cover; Half Title; Title Page; Copyright Page; Table of Contents; Acknowledgments; Introduction; Contributors; Section One: Thinking about Confidentiality; 1 Confidentiality as a Virtue; 2 Trust, Confidentiality, and the Possibility of Psychoanalysis; 3 Having a Thought of One's Own; 4. The Why of Sharing and Not the What: Confidentiality and Psychoanalytic Purpose; 5 Civic Confidentiality and Psychoanalytic Confidentiality; Section Two: Dilemmas in Treatment, Research, and Training; 6 Some Reflections on Confidentiality in Clinical Practice |
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7 Psychoanalytic Research and Confidentiality: Dilemmas8 Confidentiality and Training Analyses; 9 Confidentiality, Reporting, and Training Analyses; 10 Confidentiality, Privacy, and the Psychoanalytic Career; Section Three: Clinical Practice; 11 The Early History of the Concept of Confidentiality; 12 Confidentiality in Psychoanalysis: A Private Space for Creative Thinking and the Work of Transformation; 13 Whose Notes Are They Anyway?; 14 Outing the Victim: Breaches of Confidentiality in an Ethics Procedure; Section Four: Professional Ethics and the Law; 15 Confidentiality and Professionalism |
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16 Psychoanalytic Ethics: Has the Pendulum Swung Too Far?17 We Have Met the Enemy and He (Is) Was Us; 18 The American Psychoanalytic Association's Fight for Privacy; 19 Legal Boundaries on Conceptions of Privacy: Seeking Therapeutic Accord; 20 The Right to Privacy: A Comment on the Production of Complainants' Personal Records in Sexual-Assault Cases; Epilogue; 21. A Psychoanalyst Looks at the Witness Stand Anne Hayman; Index |
Summary |
The distinguished contributors to Confidentiality probe the ethical, legal, and clinical implications of a deceptively simple proposition: Psychoanalytic treatment requires a confidential relationship between analyst and analysand. But how, they ask, should we understand confidentiality in a psychoanalytically meaningful way? Is confidentiality a therapeutic requisite of psychoanalysis, an ethical precept independent of psychoanalytic principles, or simply a legal accommodation with the powers that be? In wrestling with these questions, the contributors to Confidentiality |
Bibliography |
Includes bibliographical references and index |
Notes |
Print version record |
Subject |
Psychotherapist and patient -- Moral and ethical aspects
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Psychoanalysis -- Moral and ethical aspects
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Confidential communications -- Physicians.
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Confidentiality -- ethics
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Psychoanalysis -- ethics
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Confidentiality -- legislation & jurisprudence
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Professional-Patient Relations -- ethics
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HEALTH & FITNESS -- Diseases -- General.
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MEDICAL -- Clinical Medicine.
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MEDICAL -- Diseases.
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MEDICAL -- Evidence-Based Medicine.
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MEDICAL -- Internal Medicine.
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Confidential communications -- Physicians
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Psychoanalysis -- Moral and ethical aspects
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Psychotherapist and patient -- Moral and ethical aspects
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Psychoanalytiker
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Klient
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Vertraulichkeit
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Aufsatzsammlung
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Psychotherapeut
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Schweigepflicht
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Ethik
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Psychoanalytische therapie.
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Psychotherapeut-cliënt-relatie.
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Vertrouwelijkheid.
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Beroepsethiek.
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psychanalyse -- relation psychothérapeute-patient -- secret professionnel -- congrès.
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Form |
Electronic book
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Author |
Levin, Charles D
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Furlong, Allanah
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O'Neil, Mary Kay
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ISBN |
9781317771050 |
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1317771052 |
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1306575052 |
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9781306575058 |
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9781317771043 |
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1317771044 |
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9781315803272 |
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1315803275 |
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