Countertransference reactions to psychotherapy group work with HIV positive children

Abstract Powerful and diverse countertransference reactions in psychotherapy group work with HIV positive children can be understood to indicate a site of mourning in the life of the group. Data from six interviews with five individuals conducting broadly psychodynamic group work with HIV positive...

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Main Author: Kuhn, Julia
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10539/4717
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-wits-oai-wiredspace.wits.ac.za-10539-47172019-05-11T03:40:46Z Countertransference reactions to psychotherapy group work with HIV positive children Kuhn, Julia Countertransference psychotherapy group work HIV-positive children Abstract Powerful and diverse countertransference reactions in psychotherapy group work with HIV positive children can be understood to indicate a site of mourning in the life of the group. Data from six interviews with five individuals conducting broadly psychodynamic group work with HIV positive children was analysed according to Thematic Content Analysis. The countertransference responses of the participants are understood as communications of the group unconscious, as well as expressions of the participants’ own unresolved unconscious difficulties. Working with HIV positive children confronts the participants with mortality and activates their earliest losses. A sense of strangeness and displacement, denial, idealisation, feelings of persecution, fantasies of rescue, rage, despair and hopelessness emerge in the countertransference and can be considered indicative of defences against mourning. These defences alternate with an engagement with the work of mourning and are represented in the countertransference as the relinquishment of omnipotence, awareness of fusion, containment, the recognition of the child’s resilience and uniqueness and the promotion of the child’s autonomy and expression. These findings may facilitate containment for therapists working with HIV positive children by offering an explanation of powerful and diverse countertransference responses as indicating a site of mourning, thereby promoting increased receptivity to unexpressed grief in therapy with these children. 2008-03-28T11:09:27Z 2008-03-28T11:09:27Z 2008-03-28T11:09:27Z Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10539/4717 en 486966 bytes 324326 bytes 24094 bytes 42186 bytes 32575 bytes application/pdf application/pdf application/pdf application/pdf application/pdf application/pdf application/pdf application/pdf application/pdf application/pdf
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Countertransference
psychotherapy group work
HIV-positive children
spellingShingle Countertransference
psychotherapy group work
HIV-positive children
Kuhn, Julia
Countertransference reactions to psychotherapy group work with HIV positive children
description Abstract Powerful and diverse countertransference reactions in psychotherapy group work with HIV positive children can be understood to indicate a site of mourning in the life of the group. Data from six interviews with five individuals conducting broadly psychodynamic group work with HIV positive children was analysed according to Thematic Content Analysis. The countertransference responses of the participants are understood as communications of the group unconscious, as well as expressions of the participants’ own unresolved unconscious difficulties. Working with HIV positive children confronts the participants with mortality and activates their earliest losses. A sense of strangeness and displacement, denial, idealisation, feelings of persecution, fantasies of rescue, rage, despair and hopelessness emerge in the countertransference and can be considered indicative of defences against mourning. These defences alternate with an engagement with the work of mourning and are represented in the countertransference as the relinquishment of omnipotence, awareness of fusion, containment, the recognition of the child’s resilience and uniqueness and the promotion of the child’s autonomy and expression. These findings may facilitate containment for therapists working with HIV positive children by offering an explanation of powerful and diverse countertransference responses as indicating a site of mourning, thereby promoting increased receptivity to unexpressed grief in therapy with these children.
author Kuhn, Julia
author_facet Kuhn, Julia
author_sort Kuhn, Julia
title Countertransference reactions to psychotherapy group work with HIV positive children
title_short Countertransference reactions to psychotherapy group work with HIV positive children
title_full Countertransference reactions to psychotherapy group work with HIV positive children
title_fullStr Countertransference reactions to psychotherapy group work with HIV positive children
title_full_unstemmed Countertransference reactions to psychotherapy group work with HIV positive children
title_sort countertransference reactions to psychotherapy group work with hiv positive children
publishDate 2008
url http://hdl.handle.net/10539/4717
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