This article presents an introduction to Ludwig Binswanger's Comments on Hermann Rorschach's , published in the in 1923, after Rorschach's death in 1922. Binswanger, one of the most distinguished psychiatrists of the twentieth century and a close professional colleague and compatriot in the Swiss Psychiatric and Psychoanalytic Societies, was blazing new trails by incorporating turn-of-the-century phenomenology and experimental psychology into Swiss psychiatry. His comments, which have been noted for over 100 years but never before translated, are a critical review of Rorschach's monograph, highlighting the undeveloped status of the test theory and philosophical foundations. Binswanger's comments illuminate philosophical, conceptual and scientific pathways not taken in the development of the test following Rorschach's untimely demise.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0957154X211062517 | DOI Listing |
Hist Psychiatry
March 2022
Independent practitioner, USA.
This article presents an introduction to Ludwig Binswanger's Comments on Hermann Rorschach's , published in the in 1923, after Rorschach's death in 1922. Binswanger, one of the most distinguished psychiatrists of the twentieth century and a close professional colleague and compatriot in the Swiss Psychiatric and Psychoanalytic Societies, was blazing new trails by incorporating turn-of-the-century phenomenology and experimental psychology into Swiss psychiatry. His comments, which have been noted for over 100 years but never before translated, are a critical review of Rorschach's monograph, highlighting the undeveloped status of the test theory and philosophical foundations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAddiction
April 2020
Division of General Internal Medicine, University of Colorado School of Medicine, Aurora, CO, USA.
Background: Patients with mental illness are frequently treated in primary care, where Primary Care Providers (PCPs) report feeling ill-equipped to manage their care. Team-based models of care improve outcomes for patients with mental illness, but multiple barriers limit adoption. Barriers include practical issues and psychosocial factors associated with the reorganization of care.
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October 2018
Institute for Health Research, Kaiser Permanente Colorado, PO Box 378066, Denver, CO, 80237-8066, USA.
Addiction
September 2017
Institute for Health Research, Kaiser Permanente Colorado, Division of General Internal Medicine, University of Colorado School of Medicine, Denver, CO, USA.
Rising opioid overdose hospitalization rates and costs, stagnant in-hospital mortality rates and poor care transitions highlight the need to improve health services for people who use opioids in the hospital and across the continuum of care. A systems approach may identify opportunities to prevent overdoses and improve outcomes from overdose.
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