In the early 1950s, the psychoanalysts Michael and Enid Balint established in the Tavistock Clinic, an innovative peer group for general practitioners (GPs). The goal was to create a forum of family doctors to discuss case studies of a psychosocial nature and to provide then with psychotherapeutic tools to better help their patients. What started as a small peer group of GPs in the London became, by the 1960s, a worldwide medical movement which still exists today. This article traces the cultural and social origins of the Balint Groups movement, and aims to contextualize it within the ‘psychosocial turn’ of interwar and postwar Britain; the need of general practice to renew itself as a profession after WWII and the introduction of the then ...
Medicalisation has been an important concept in sociological discussions of medicine since the term?...
One of the challenges of being a physician is that some patients bring with them such complex sympto...
This paper delves into the world of medical and Army psychiatric practice in Britain during the 1950...
The article looks at the place of cases in the psychoanalytic universe of Michael Balint, while givi...
Balint Groups were traditionally established as reflective groups by psychoanalyst Michael and Enid ...
This thesis was submitted for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy and awarded by Brunel University.Th...
The general practitioner has a central position in the health care system, but demands have increase...
The article presents and discusses a two-decades correspondence between Michael Balint and D.W. Winn...
This article is about the connections between the fields of sociology and psychoanalysis, as they ha...
Michael Balint conducted several multi-year training programs for general practitioners designed to ...
!e doctor-patient relationship has assumed varied importance throughout history. However, a good rel...
Upon following the way of the ‘Balint idea’ - which was originally conceived and developed for gener...
This article aims at analysing the history of the logic of patient-centred care (PCC) by addressing ...
This article explores the circulation of ‘anti-psychiatry’ in British film and television during the...
The work of psychiatrists affiliated with the Tavistock Clinic and Tavistock Institute has been cred...
Medicalisation has been an important concept in sociological discussions of medicine since the term?...
One of the challenges of being a physician is that some patients bring with them such complex sympto...
This paper delves into the world of medical and Army psychiatric practice in Britain during the 1950...
The article looks at the place of cases in the psychoanalytic universe of Michael Balint, while givi...
Balint Groups were traditionally established as reflective groups by psychoanalyst Michael and Enid ...
This thesis was submitted for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy and awarded by Brunel University.Th...
The general practitioner has a central position in the health care system, but demands have increase...
The article presents and discusses a two-decades correspondence between Michael Balint and D.W. Winn...
This article is about the connections between the fields of sociology and psychoanalysis, as they ha...
Michael Balint conducted several multi-year training programs for general practitioners designed to ...
!e doctor-patient relationship has assumed varied importance throughout history. However, a good rel...
Upon following the way of the ‘Balint idea’ - which was originally conceived and developed for gener...
This article aims at analysing the history of the logic of patient-centred care (PCC) by addressing ...
This article explores the circulation of ‘anti-psychiatry’ in British film and television during the...
The work of psychiatrists affiliated with the Tavistock Clinic and Tavistock Institute has been cred...
Medicalisation has been an important concept in sociological discussions of medicine since the term?...
One of the challenges of being a physician is that some patients bring with them such complex sympto...
This paper delves into the world of medical and Army psychiatric practice in Britain during the 1950...