Publications by authors named "Plakun E"

Article Synopsis
  • The column explores how dreams are significant in psychoanalysis and psychodynamic therapy.
  • It shares a personal story about how a particular dream inspired the author to pursue a career in psychoanalysis.
  • The piece also introduces the concept of social dreaming, highlighting its relevance in understanding group dynamics and collective unconscious.
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This column explores the challenges involved in providing psychotherapy through artificial intelligence. It reviews artificial intelligence's capacity across schools of therapy to address relevant issues related to privacy, the use of technical interventions, and the therapeutic relationship.

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Supervision of psychotherapy is recognized as fundamental for attaining competency in psychotherapy. However, there is a lack of training in "best practices" of supervisory skills, and some supervisors may lack contemporary knowledge to support supervisees adequately. Training program leadership challenged by limited time and resources to provide supervisors with the necessary education and support can benefit from additional resources for developing psychotherapy supervisors.

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This second column in a series on psychodynamic therapy (PDT) offers an overview of concepts related to the therapeutic stance of PDT. It reviews resistance, components of the therapeutic relationship, and elements that constitute the therapeutic stance of PDT.

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This first column in a series on psychodynamic therapy (PDT) offers an overview of the basics required to understand and master the provision of PDT. It offers a way of understanding what patients struggle with when viewed through a psychodynamic lens and then examines evidence-based core elements of psychotherapy and PDT.

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This column summarizes the findings of 2 recent studies of interest to psychotherapists. One study reports that the use of antidepressant medication is not associated with long-term improvement in health-related quality of life, while the other finds that psychotic experiences in adolescents are more closely associated with environmental experiences than with genetic risk. The column discusses the implications of these studies for psychotherapists and for the field at large.

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Despite the 2008 Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act, access to psychotherapy through health insurance is quite limited. The 2019 landmark verdict in Wit v. United Behavioral Health offered hope of change.

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This paper describes forces that have adversely affected the place of the psychodynamic perspective within psychiatric practice and training over the last generation. One effect of these forces has been to create a lost generation of psychiatrists with little knowledge or experience with psychodynamic treatment. The article addresses opportunities to reverse some of the detrimental effects of recent changes.

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Reports of destructive behavior by military personnel after demobilization have become more frequent; however, the pathways that might lead these individuals to commit such acts are not clear enough. This column presents the case of a retired soldier who reported the onset of pyromania after military service, and the relationship between dissociation and reenactment of the trauma is discussed. The main conclusions are that psychotherapy of traumatized patients should focus on helping them create a verbal representation of the trauma and that integrating ceremonies and rituals into treatment is a possible and significant option.

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This column describes a recent $14.3 million settlement in a case brought against United Behavioral Health by the Department of Labor and New York State Attorney General Letitia James. United Behavioral Health agreed to stop 2 practices that were in violation of the Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act.

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This column explains the value of developing routine medical necessity letters to help patients maximize the likelihood of securing insurance approval for medically necessary services for the treatment of mental and substance use disorders, including psychotherapeutic treatment. The structure proposed for such medical necessity letters is based on the terms of the Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act and the landmark verdict in the federal class action known as Wit v. United Behavioral Health/Optum.

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This column summarizes the verdict in the federal class action known as Wit v United Behavioral Health (UBH)/Optum, highlighting the verdict's implications for increasing access to care, implementing the mental health parity law, and reducing health disparities. Achieving these results requires recognition of the verdict as more than simply a nice news story, but as a decision that actually offers individual clinicians, their professional organizations, as well as patients, families, and their consumer organizations, a powerful tool for implementing change if they take up the task of learning how to use it. The verdict applies to outpatient treatment, including psychotherapy, along with 2 other levels of care: intensive outpatient programs and residential treatment.

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The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic thrust health care professionals around the globe to the frontlines to care for those affected by this medical crisis. While many surgical and procedural medical subspecialties experienced drastic declines in patient visits during this time, the demand for psychiatric services was more stable. In response to statewide stay at home orders, third-year residents in the psychiatry outpatient clinic described in this article quickly transitioned to telepsychiatry to continue providing care to their patients.

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This column anticipates challenges likely to be faced by psychotherapists and their patients after the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic subsides. It looks beyond the current impact of loneliness, isolation, thwarted belongingness, and loss toward the longer term impact of moral injury and blocked opportunities for mourning.

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This column is the third in a series summarizing the 2-day Centennial Conference of the Austen Riggs Center. The conference framed problems in access to care and in the nature of care provided that are part of a mental health crisis in America and then worked to propose solutions. This column addresses problems with access to care and summarizes the conference's closing keynote by Peter Fonagy, PhD, OBE, addressing issues both of access to care and of the nature of care provided.

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This column is the second in a series summarizing the 2-day Centennial Conference of the Austen Riggs Center. The conference framed problems in access to care and in the nature of the care being provided that are part of a mental health crisis in America, and then worked to propose solutions. This column addresses problems with the nature of care provided, proposing psychodynamic perspectives that offer hope through engagement.

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This column is the first in a series summarizing the 2-day Centennial Conference of the Austen Riggs Center. The conference framed problems in access to care and in the nature of care provided that are part of a mental health crisis in America, and then worked to propose solutions. This column focuses on framing the problems and on beginning to address what it might take to "bend the curve" in mental health outcomes.

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In the Canadian province of Ontario, the Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care is proposing to impose arbitrary limits on access to psychotherapy provided by physicians. This column presents and debunks 3 myths associated with this ill-conceived proposal: (1) that long-term psychotherapy costs the health care system too much money, making it necessary for the government to curb this spending; (2) that long-term psychotherapy is a non-evidence-based treatment being needlessly spent on the worried well; and (3) that we need to focus on quick treatments, not long ones.

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This column reviews the history of the Austen Riggs Center on the occasion of its centennial. Riggs has come to stand for high quality, state of the art, biopsychosocial, psychodynamic treatment in contemporary psychiatry and psychoanalysis. This column reviews elements of the positioning of Riggs in the field, and contributions that have emerged from Riggs that continue to have an impact on psychiatry, psychoanalysis, and their intersection-psychodynamic psychiatry.

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