Treating the 'Untreatable': Healing in the Realms of Madness and over 1.5 million other books are available for Amazon Kindle . Learn more


or
Sign in to turn on 1-Click ordering.
Trade in Yours
For a £1.85 Gift Card
Trade in
More Buying Choices
Have one to sell? Sell yours here
Sorry, this item is not available in
Image not available for
Colour:
Image not available

 
Start reading Treating the 'Untreatable': Healing in the Realms of Madness on your Kindle in under a minute.

Don't have a Kindle? Get your Kindle here, or download a FREE Kindle Reading App.

Treating the 'Untreatable': Healing in the Realms of Madness: Studies in the Intensive Psychotherapy of Schizophrenia and Delusional Disorders [Paperback]

Ira Steinman

RRP: £25.99
Price: £22.94 & this item Delivered FREE in the UK with Super Saver Delivery. See details and conditions
You Save: £3.05 (12%)
o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o
Only 2 left in stock (more on the way).
Dispatched from and sold by Amazon. Gift-wrap available.
Want it Thursday, 20 June? Choose Express delivery at checkout. Details

Formats

Amazon Price New from Used from
Kindle Edition £18.01  
Hardcover --  
Paperback £22.94  
Trade In this Item for up to £1.85
Trade in Treating the 'Untreatable': Healing in the Realms of Madness: Studies in the Intensive Psychotherapy of Schizophrenia and Delusional Disorders for an Amazon.co.uk gift card of up to £1.85, which you can then spend on millions of items across the site. Trade-in values may vary (terms apply). Special Offer until June 30, 2013: Receive an additional £5 promotional Gift Card, when you trade-in at least £10 worth of books. Learn more

Book Description

14 May 2009 1855756803 978-1855756809
Treating the 'Untreatable' offers the hope of recovery, healing and cure for the most severe psychotic disturbances, schizophrenia and delusional disorder. Through a psychotherapeutic exploration of hallucinations, delusions and thought disorder, even the most hopeless and 'untreatable' patients have a chance for returning to a life of relationships and function even after years, if not decades, of disturbance. These studies in the intensive psychotherapy of schizophrenia and delusional disorders demonstrate that recovery, healing and cure can be achieved in those most disturbed. 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 twelve 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. The book 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.


Product details


More About the Author

Discover books, learn about writers, and more.

Product Description

Review

...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, MD, Clinical Professor, Yale Child Study Center, Past-President, American Psychiatric Association<br /><br />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)<br /><br />I am very pleased to enthusiastically recommend 'Treating the 'Untreatable' by Ira Steinman. This is a most important book. I have no doubt that it will be controversial, but there are a good number of persons, of which I include myself, who are very familiar with the content of the kind of work that Ira Steinman is describing; although we might not all have the degree of success that he has, we do have similar successes and indeed there is a long history of such work from this approach. I think it very exciting to contemplate this kind of book, which will appeal to a wide audience and that focuses on immediate narratives of one person's clinical experiences in a psychodynamic psychotherapy as a treatment for schizophrenia. --Brian Martindale, M.D. Past President of ISPS UK, the International Association for the Psychological Treatment of the Schizophrenias and other Psychoses

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)

I am very pleased to enthusiastically recommend 'Treating the 'Untreatable' by Ira Steinman. This is a most important book. I have no doubt that it will be controversial, but there are a good number of persons, of which I include myself, who are very familiar with the content of the kind of work that Ira Steinman is describing; although we might not all have the degree of success that he has, we do have similar successes and indeed there is a long history of such work from this approach. I think it very exciting to contemplate this kind of book, which will appeal to a wide audience and that focuses on immediate narratives of one person's clinical experiences in a psychodynamic psychotherapy as a treatment for schizophrenia. --Brian Martindale, M.D. Past President of ISPS UK, the International Association for the Psychological Treatment of the Schizophrenias and other Psychoses

About the Author

Ira Steinman has focused on schizophrenia for 45 years; his early training ranged from studying with R.D. Laing to working at the National Academy of Sciences' Drug Efficacy Study, which evaluated all the antipsychotic medications available at that time. For more than 35 years, he has pursued an out-patient psychiatric practice where he has been able to demonstrate that an intensive psychoanalytic psychotherapy, in conjunction with the judicious use of antipsychotic medication, can help even the most lost and disturbed schizophrenic and delusional patients recover, heal and, at times, achieve a cure. With such an approach, some allegedly 'untreatable' schizophrenics have been able to work their way off of antipsychotic medication. He has spoken on this subject at length on a local, statewide, national and international level for more than twenty five years. He is a member of the ISPS (International Society for the Psychological Treatments of the Schizophrenias and other Psychoses); the American Psychiatric Association; and the Northern California Psychiatric Association.

Inside This Book (Learn More)
Browse Sample Pages
Front Cover | Copyright | Table of Contents | Excerpt | Back Cover
Search inside this book:

Customer Reviews

There are no customer reviews yet on Amazon.co.uk.
5 star
4 star
3 star
2 star
1 star
Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta)
Amazon.com: 5.0 out of 5 stars  6 reviews
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Treating the 'Untreatable' 20 Mar 2009
By Mary C. Lamia - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
Dr. Ira Steinman has exclusively focused on intensively treating severely disturbed patients for over four decades with a psychoanalytically-informed approach. What's most impressive is that he has done so throughout the era of managed care, which has defined and limited the role of mental health professionals in treating severely ill patients to the use of psychotropic medication, supportive psychotherapy, cognitive-behavioral treatment, group psychotherapy, or treatments that promote reality testing. Dr. Steinman's book, Treating the `Untreatable': Healing in the Realms of Madness, exemplifies his impressive work.

He chronicles his intensive treatment of a dozen patients. His delusional and schizophrenic patients gradually become aware "that they are the creators of their psychotic productions" and that their "projected and feared impulses that took the form of hallucinations and delusions become understandable and detoxified." The basis of his approach to treatment seems so logical and sensible, although he is one of very few mental health professionals who has continued to treat this population as though they are indeed treatable. He asks, "What happens if we genuinely try to understand the origin of such psychotic beliefs, even with the most disturbed, and attempt to put together an emotional and historical thread that describes how delusional beliefs or schizophrenic thought began?"

The therapist, according to Dr. Steinman, "must be able to see and gradually work therapeutically with delusions, hallucinations, unconscious meanings, resistances to insights, his own reactions and the patient's transference reactions from the past and to the current changing situation." Judiciously using medications for his patients as he helps them work through their traumas, Dr. Steinman has found the delicate balance between what symptoms are tolerable to his patients, and where they need a pharmaceutical shield.

Courageously gearing his book to the general public as well as to his colleagues, Ira Steinman illustrates the inner life of severely mentally ill patients, "articulates a rationale for the use of an intensive psychodynamic psychotherapy" for these patients, and "proves false the current belief that such an in-depth exploratory psychotherapy is of no benefit in such severely disorganized patients." He demonstrates, through case examples, that childhood trauma is "instrumental in the development of a certain percentage of people who are diagnosed as schizophrenic." Nearly all of the patients he described in his book have been off antipsychotic medications for up to thirty years, even after previous long courses of supportive psychotherapy, extensive antipsychotic medication, and repeated hospitalizations that left the patients in the throes of schizophrenic disorganization. Dr. Steinman's intensive psychotherapeutic work, as described in Treating the `Untreatable' led to healing and cure.

Dr. Steinman offers a compelling argument for the use of psychoanalytic psychotherapy in treating the severely disturbed. Over the long run, such treatment is likely to cost less than repeated hospitalizations and lifelong supportive psychotherapy. He concludes that as a field we "have lost our way in treating severely disturbed and delusional patients." Undoubtedly he is correct. And most importantly he demonstrates the efficacy of uncovering exploratory dynamic psychotherapy to treat the `untreatable'. Dr. Ira Steinman is an inspiration to graduate students as well as to established psychotherapists. Similarly, Treating the `Untreatable' offers hope--the possibility of having a fulfilling life--for those who suffer terribly from serious mental illness.
--Mary C. Lamia, Ph.D.
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Crucial reading for therapists and patients 16 Mar 2009
By Owen D. Renik - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
'Alongside psycho-pharmacological intervention and the benefits it brings,
the treatment of seriously disordered individuals requires that their
delusional beliefs be addressed psychotherapeutically; otherwise, there is
no significant and sustained symptom relief. Ira Steinman provides the
most thoughtful, well articulated account available of how such treatment
should be conducted, complete with captivating and instructive case
examples. I wish we could have used his book in our residency program when
I was Director of Training at the Department of Psychiatry, Mount Zion
Hospital, San Francisco. As Editor-in-Chief of 'The Psychoanalytic
Quarterly' for ten years, and Program Chair of the American Psychoanalytic
Association for two terms, I can assure you that clinicians from various
backgrounds and with all levels of experience will want to read "Treating
the 'Untreatable'" and will find it enormously useful when they do.'
- Owen Renik, M.D.
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars This book should start a revolution in the art of psychotherapy 18 Aug 2009
By Foxfire - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
I have been searching for a book like this for the past ten years. I wish I could give it ten stars.

I have a nephew who has been diagnosed with 'schizoaffective disorder'. He has been in and out of hospitals and jail and on and off anti-psychotic meds. He has a mother who would drive anyone, including me, insane. Every time I spend time with my nephew, within a couple of days, he starts to integrate, he feels better and better, and it seems obvious that he is not 'incurably schizophrenic' as his mother insists - because, of course, if he is not crazy, then she is the problem.

This book made me feel sane for insisting, against the opinions of dozens of psychologists, psychotherapists, social workers and counselors, that my nephew is reachable. I cried at the stories of abuse that Stein chronicles and the healing that is possible. His proscription for healing is exquisitely simple although not easy. His explanations are accessible for the layperson but aimed squarely at the field of psychotherapy, as well. He merely insists that the client confront and integrate the idea that the client is the inventor of their delusions, voices, other personalities, their break with external reality. Stein demonstrates that the delusions of his clients are understandable, that they are created out of the need to escape dire emotional pain. Merely giving clients supportive therapy does not work. Compassionate listening is critical for about three months, he finds, just the time it takes to compile an in-depth history of the client and, as much as he can, the history of the different delusions and voices. Stein invites the reader into the therapy room as he goes to work, gently but insistently, bringing the client into reality. Sometimes he talks directly to the delusions and different voices, making sense of who and what they represent to the client. He helps his clients learn to deal with their pain in other ways while reminding them over and over that they are the source of the delusions invented - and brilliantly so - for protection from a desperately painful reality. During this time, maybe a couple of years, it gets dicey for the clients as they let go of their defenses and confront sometimes horrible abuse. Stein writes of chasing clients as they flee his office, running for the Golden Gate Bridge to commit suicide. But he seems unfazed. Stein uses antipsychotic medications and short term hospitalizations for such episodes, but his clients progress. He has stories of clients in their fifties, with thirty years of derangement, hospitalizations, and heavy medications, who let go of their delusions, get off of medications and heal themselves.

I felt as if I were sitting in the room with Stein and his clients, as if I were a first-year student in psychotherapy, listening to a master. Stein has written a tribute to the power and brilliance of the human mind.

This book should start a revolution in the art of psychotherapy.

Now, Dr. Stein, please write a book about how to deal with the parents who interfere with the recovery of their adult children at every turn.
Were these reviews helpful?   Let us know

Customer Discussions

This product's forum
Discussion Replies Latest Post
No discussions yet

Ask questions, Share opinions, Gain insight
Start a new discussion
Topic:
First post:
Prompts for sign-in
 

Search Customer Discussions
Search all Amazon discussions
   


Listmania!

Create a Listmania! list

Look for similar items by category


Feedback


Amazon.co.uk Privacy Statement Amazon.co.uk Delivery Information Amazon.co.uk Returns & Exchanges