Abstract: | ![]() Reviews the book, Short-term dynamic psychotherapy: Evaluation and techniques (2nd edition) by Peter E. Sifneos (1988). The book focuses specifically, if not exclusively, on short-term anxiety-provoking psychotherapy (STAPP). This mode of treatment is restricted to patients whose psychopathology results from an oedipal conflict, who have had meaningful relationships with another during early childhood, who have the capacity to relate flexibly and expressively with the psychotherapist, who have above-average intelligence and psychological sophistication, and who are motivated for change and not simply symptom relief. The book is organized into three sections: four chapters concern the psychiatric evaluation, seven relatively brief chapters review and illustrate techniques for doing STAPP, and two chapters focus on the results of treatment. In general, this is not a volume for the beginning reader of short-term treatment. It does not overview the entire field but details only one specific type of treatment, which is appropriate for only a limited group of patients. Additionally, the reader will need some understanding of dynamic theory in order to appreciate fully the book's sophistication. These points aside, the book affords the reader an opportunity to see one type of short-term treatment in detail with realistic and sound case material presented in a comprehensible and informative manner. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved) |