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Interpersonal Diagnosis and Treatment of Personality Disorders

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This influential work helps clinicians resolve questions of overlap among diagnostic categories, offers specific and sensible suggestions for treatment interventions, and describes common transference problems in therapy. <!--? prefix = o ns = "" /-->

431 pages, Hardcover

First published May 21, 1993

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Lorna Smith Benjamin

9 books4 followers

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Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews
Profile Image for Julia.
292 reviews7 followers
September 5, 2010
For my first two years of grad school, I pretty much resisted putting assigned readings on goodreads. That wasn't too hard; much of my reading involves journal articles, not books. But, fuck it. I realized that, particularly with regard to clinical work, chronicling what I read for posterity may be interesting and/or useful for me later (I doubt it's interesting for anyone else).

So, with that said, this book is the pretty much the bible of Axis II. If you work in mental health, and you've ever felt overwhelmed by the implications of an "Axis II flavor" in one of your clients, or irritated at the high comorbidity and fuzzy diagnostic labels in the DSM, or you're at all fascinated by interpersonal processes, this book will be nothing short of a miracle.

I'm taking Lorna's class in Interpersonal Reconstructive Therapy in the inpatient unit of a neuropsychiatric hospital this year, and even without experiencing her exceptional mind in person, I'd recommend this book, without hesitation or reservation, to anyone who does clinical work. Lorna's theory of disordered personalities is cohesive, eloquent, parsimonious, and, moreover, when put into practice, it works on the clients for whom no one thinks anything will work. I'm working with men who have committed child sex offenses this year, and have already repeatedly reconsulted chapters, and always found a nugget of wisdom I pray I'm going to be able to render clinically useful.
Profile Image for Suzanne.
68 reviews3 followers
March 29, 2008
A clinical book, so perhaps not as interesting to those who aren't working in the field of psychology/psychiatry. Some parts of it can be a little bit dry to read. But get through that and you will find a fascinating take on the origins and treatment for axis 2 disorders. Interpersonal Relations Therapy I think has a better handle on personality disorders than most other modes of therapy. I loved it and refer to it over and over.
Profile Image for James.
Author 15 books100 followers
April 23, 2009
A masterful piece of work - this book goes far beyond the DSM in explaining how Axis II disorders work and how to recognize and effectively treat them. I can't think of a situation where a clinician working with clients wouldn't find this useful.
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