000 02000cam a2200229 4500500
005 20250121185028.0
041 _afre
042 _adc
100 1 0 _aPucheu-Paillet, Sylvie
_eauthor
245 0 0 _aGroups for the Analysis of Carer Practices in the General Hospital: The Experience of a Clinical Psychologist
260 _c2015.
500 _a98
520 _aThis article gives an account of the practice of a psychoanalytically-oriented clinical psychologist conducting groups for analyzing practices in the context of her assignments at a general hospital. The article begins with a description of the current status quo of the relationship between ‘carers of the body’ (doctors and paramedics) and patients (persons suffering from serious pathologies or multiple traumas) as well as the specific risks of professional exhaustion in the caring profession. We then define the theoretical framework that underpins the task of conducting these groups as undertaken by a psychologist who is herself part of the institution. These groups, which are akin to Balint groups, focus on the caring relationship and on the different interactions that occur within it. The psychologist is there to help group members ‘think through’ clinical situations and the psychic issues underlying them, and to help them ‘clarify’ their fee­lings. Above and beyond the resistances that tend to be provoked by this type of training, which involves working on the feelings of carers, in our discussion we note how the organizational context of hospitals renders the task of setting them up increasingly difficult.
690 _aconducting a group
690 _adiscussion group
690 _ageneral hospital
690 _apsychanalysis
690 _acarer/patient relationship
690 _aclinical psychologist
786 0 _nConnexions | o 104 | 2 | 2015-10-21 | p. 135-148 | 0337-3126
856 4 1 _uhttps://shs.cairn.info/journal-connexions-2015-2-page-135?lang=en&redirect-ssocas=7080
999 _c651208
_d651208