Resolving Therapeutic Impasses by Using the Supervisor's Countertransference |
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Authors: | Herbert S. Strean |
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Affiliation: | (1) Smith College School for Social Work, Lilly Hall, Northampton , MA, USA;(2) Smith College School for Social Work, Lilly Hall, Northampton , MA 01063, USA |
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Abstract: | The traditional role-set of the clinical social work supervisor has grown to be much more complex. From the exclusive position of teacher, administrator, and overseer she is now an integral part of a system wherein she is influenced not only by the therapist, client, and her own promptings but is a prime source of feedback to the client through the supervisee.As clinical social workers have shifted their conceptualization of therapy to a two-person psychology, this perspective has emerged as part of the supervisory process. Now the supervisor's countertransference responses to the supervisee, to his client, and to their interaction have assumed importance in supervisory work. This article is an attempt to demonstrate through case illustrations how the supervisor's disclosure of countertransference responses to the supervisee can strengthen the supervisory alliance which then enables the client and therapist to resolve therapeutic impasses. |
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Keywords: | countertransference self-disclosure supervision therapeutic impasse |
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