Treating the "Untreatable"
Healing in the Realms of Madness

Cloth: 978 1 85575 609 0
Price: $42.95
Published: February 2009 

Publisher: Karnac Books
240 pp., 6 3/4" x 9 1/2"
In this era of treating schizophrenic and delusional patients with a primarily antipsychotic drug oriented approach, a more thorough exploration of the meaning to the patient of his psychosis—with judicious antipsychotic use, when indicated—leads to internal character and external behavioral change that is far more lasting than with antipsychotic use alone. With such a psychodynamic approach, some of these previously chaotic, disturbed and heavily medicated people were able to understand the symbolism and the origin of their psychotic productions and go off antipsychotic medication altogether.

Treating the 'Untreatable' provides an overview of the chaotic world of the schizophrenic or delusional patient, a history of intensive psychotherapy with such patients, and thirteen case histories demonstrating varying degrees of recovery, healing and cure. Some of the patients were able to integrate delusional systems that had persisted for many years and give up previous extensive antipsychotic medication, as they understood and worked through psychological issues underlying their psychotic orientation.

Treating the’Untreatable’ offers compelling stories for the general reader and teaching tales for students and mental health practitioners who want to work in the realm of madness. These clinical cases demonstrate the efficacy of an intensive psychotherapy of schizophrenia and delusional states, combined with the judicious use of antipsychotics. These tales show that even seemingly "untreatable" and "hopeless" psychotic patients may recover and heal in the course of an inquiring psychodynamic psychotherapy aimed at understanding and working through the symbolic meaning of his or her hallucinations, delusions and bizarre thoughts and actions. Such an approach has led to some maintaining their gains for decades.

Treating the 'Untreatable' ultimately questions why patients who responded to an insight oriented psychotherapy were previously viewed as 'untreatable' and given high doses of antipsychotic medication. In addition, the book talks about some of the factors that have led the field of psychiatry to pursue a primarily antipsychotic medication approach in patients so disturbed, rather than integrating a potentially healing dynamic psychotherapy into one's therapeutic armamentarium.

Table of Contents:
About the Author; Preface; 1) Delusional Reality; 2) The Psychotherapy of Delusional States; 3) Causes of a Delusional Orientation; 4) The Method; 5) The History of the Psychotherapy of; Schizophrenia and Delusional States; 6) Psychotherapeutic Technique and Stages in the Psychotherapy of Delusional States; Apologia and Clinical Presentation; 7) The Good Angel, the Bad Devil, The Smiling Man’s Voice and Mother-God; 8) the Pugilist, Mary, and the Mother with the Fiery Halo; 9) Two Rats and the Extraterrestrial; 10) The Ghost in the History; 11) Stalemate; 12) Maya, Little, and the World of Illusion; 13) Death, Egyptian Style; 14) Nobody; 15) The Voice Didn’t Win; 16) The World Class Artist of the Symbolic World: The Mafia, the Movie Stars and the “Unconscious God”; 17) Can Anyone That Evil Ever Really Die? 18) The Cheerleader; 19) Thoughts, Lessons and Conclusions; Appendix 1: Long-Term Studies on Schizophrenia—Brian Koehler, Ph.D.; Appendix 2: Brief Review of Psychoanalytic Perspectives on Schizophrenia—Brian Koehler, Ph.D.; References.


Customers who have this book also purchased these titles:
Share
Reviews & Endorsements:
"Treating the 'Untreatable' is a beautiful forward development of Frieda Fromm-Reichman's seminal work. It's a creative confirmation of the virtues of psychodynamic psychotherapy in the hands of a virtuoso for the most disturbed patients many of us are reluctant to engage. For our residents who have little psychotherapy training and for seasoned clinicians, the book is an awakening!"
- Herbert S. Sacks, M.D., Past-President, American Psychiatric Association and Clinical Professor , Yale Child Study Center
“In bell clear, eloquent language, Ira Steinman shows his deep knowledge and compassion for the mentally ill and their problems. He never falls into the trap of thinking that mentally ill people are only that, and so he pleads for the understanding that will allow therapists to elicit the strength and health in their sickest patients. The word 'cure' is seldom attached to schizophrenia. Dr Steinman dares to use it and sometimes to prove it.”
- Joanne Greenberg, author of I Never Promised you a Rose Garden (under the pseudonym of Hannah Green)