Stricker (2009), Grinfeld (2009), and Lampropoulos (2009) provide three types of commentary on my case of Ms. Q (Ingram, 2009): feedback on my handling of psychotherapy with this high-functioning client; critical evaluation of my “28 core clinical hypotheses” model; and discussion of where this model fits within four categories of integrative psychotherapy—common factors integration, theoretical integration, assimilative integration, and technical eclecticism. In this response I focus on each topic in turn, and conclude with a discussion of the training of clinical graduate students as integrationally-oriented psychotherapists.
Ward and Hogan’s (2015) case of "Judith, " a client with traumatic brain injury (TBI), hig...
Clinical progress in psychiatry is dependant upon academic acceptance of peer reviewed, scientific r...
Sechrest and Smith provide a well-reasoned argument that psychotherapy is not, as it should be, an i...
This commentary on the integrative case study of Ms. Q by Barbara Ingram (2009) aims to discuss rele...
This commentary on the integrative case study of Ms. Q by Barbara Ingram (2009) aims to discuss rele...
Ingram's (2009) case history of Ms. Q demonstrates how an integrative model can be used to tailor th...
This case study describes the treatment of a married mother—Ms. Q—in her mid-thirties who sought hel...
This case study describes the treatment of a married mother—Ms. Q—in her mid-thirties who sought hel...
Ingram (2009) presents a case study conducted within her model of psychotherapy integration, a syste...
Psychotherapy is plagued with fragmentation of, models, theories and interventions. The future of ps...
At its most basic a psychotherapy model specifies its theory of etiology (i.e., an explanation of ho...
This case study describes the treatment of a married mother—Ms. Q—in her mid-thirties who sought hel...
Psychotherapy is plagued with fragmentation of models, theories, and interventions. The future of ps...
After a restatement of the isolationism of psychoanalysis from allied disciplines, and an examinatio...
One of the most significant debates in clinical psychology in the past decade has been focused on ev...
Ward and Hogan’s (2015) case of "Judith, " a client with traumatic brain injury (TBI), hig...
Clinical progress in psychiatry is dependant upon academic acceptance of peer reviewed, scientific r...
Sechrest and Smith provide a well-reasoned argument that psychotherapy is not, as it should be, an i...
This commentary on the integrative case study of Ms. Q by Barbara Ingram (2009) aims to discuss rele...
This commentary on the integrative case study of Ms. Q by Barbara Ingram (2009) aims to discuss rele...
Ingram's (2009) case history of Ms. Q demonstrates how an integrative model can be used to tailor th...
This case study describes the treatment of a married mother—Ms. Q—in her mid-thirties who sought hel...
This case study describes the treatment of a married mother—Ms. Q—in her mid-thirties who sought hel...
Ingram (2009) presents a case study conducted within her model of psychotherapy integration, a syste...
Psychotherapy is plagued with fragmentation of, models, theories and interventions. The future of ps...
At its most basic a psychotherapy model specifies its theory of etiology (i.e., an explanation of ho...
This case study describes the treatment of a married mother—Ms. Q—in her mid-thirties who sought hel...
Psychotherapy is plagued with fragmentation of models, theories, and interventions. The future of ps...
After a restatement of the isolationism of psychoanalysis from allied disciplines, and an examinatio...
One of the most significant debates in clinical psychology in the past decade has been focused on ev...
Ward and Hogan’s (2015) case of "Judith, " a client with traumatic brain injury (TBI), hig...
Clinical progress in psychiatry is dependant upon academic acceptance of peer reviewed, scientific r...
Sechrest and Smith provide a well-reasoned argument that psychotherapy is not, as it should be, an i...