80 results match your criteria: "The New York University Postdoctoral Program in Psychotherapy & Psychoanalysis[Affiliation]"

Methamphetamine (MA) dependence leads to severe physical and psychological issues. Current treatments, including psychosocial therapies and residential rehabilitation, face limitations such as high relapse rates, cost, and accessibility issues. As a result, there is an urgent need for novel approaches to treat MA dependence that are effective, affordable, and accessible to patients.

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To be responsive to the growing mental health inequities in our communities, we must move beyond incremental changes to our graduate training to bolder, more transformative changes. Such efforts must move beyond targeting our academic, internship, and postdoctoral programs and instead focus on critiquing our accreditation process. Without transformation of accreditation and other macrostructural dynamics in psychology, our training programs will continue to perpetuate the status quo and limit the ability of graduate trainees to adequately address mental health disparities.

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This introduction provides an overview to this special issue honoring the work and legacy of Jeremy D. Safran. Born of the Jeremy Safran Memorial Conference, held on April 2nd, 2023, this issue features a wide range of contributions from leaders in the field, former students, and early career professionals whose work engages and develops central ideas from Safran's work and reflects on his impact on their own clinical work and scholarship.

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Factions are Back.

J Am Psychoanal Assoc

August 2024

New York University, Postdoctoral Program in Psychotherapy and Psychoanalysis.

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[Correction Notice: An Erratum for this article was reported online in on Jul 15 2024 (see record 2025-04658-001). In the article, three sentences and a reference were redacted related to proceedings against a university concerning its psychology program because appropriate context was not provided in the article. All versions of this article have been corrected.

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Several phase II studies have demonstrated that psilocybin-assisted therapy shows therapeutic potential across a spectrum of neuropsychiatric conditions, including major depressive disorder (MDD). However, the mechanisms underlying its often persisting beneficial effects remain unclear. Observational research suggests that improvements in psychological flexibility may mediate therapeutic effects.

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Brain morphometry in former American football players: findings from the DIAGNOSE CTE research project.

Brain

October 2024

Department of Software Engineering and Information Technology, École de technologie supérieure, Université du Québec, Montréal, QC H3C 1K3, Canada.

Article Synopsis
  • * A study evaluated brain structures using MRI in 170 former football players and 54 controls, assessing regions associated with CTE pathology, revealing significant reductions in cortical thickness and volume in players compared to controls.
  • * Former professional players showed more pronounced brain changes than former college players, specifically in areas like the hippocampus and amygdala, indicating that exposure to head impacts has lasting effects on brain structure.
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Psilocybin and lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD) experiences can range from very positive to highly challenging (e.g., fear, grief, and paranoia).

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Treating the sequelae of chronic childhood emotional abandonment.

J Clin Psychol

April 2024

Postdoctoral Program in Psychotherapy and Psychoanalysis, New York University, New York, New York, USA.

Chronic emotional abandonment is traumatic for children, and often leads them to identify with the aggressor (IWA)-in order to hold onto their needed attachment to their parents, they feel, think, and do what their parents require, blame themselves for being abused and for their family's unhappiness, and feel ashamed. IWA often persists as a general tendency. Treatment requires therapists' dependability, attunement, empathy, interest, humility, and perhaps playfulness.

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The impact of intergenerational transmissions of trauma and the dissociative states of mind that cross from parents to their children has become an important expansion of psychoanalytic theory. Clinical material will be discussed showing how an early death of a mother haunted the lives of many generations of mothers and daughters. Considerations of attachment rupture, trauma, envy, deadly and deadening aggression and shame are discussed as part of transgenerational transmission phenomena and how they are worked on in the analytic relationship.

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Importance: Adverse events (AEs) after placebo treatment are common in randomized clinical drug trials. Systematic evidence regarding these nocebo responses in vaccine trials is important for COVID-19 vaccination worldwide especially because concern about AEs is reported to be a reason for vaccination hesitancy.

Objective: To compare the frequencies of AEs reported in the placebo groups of COVID-19 vaccine trials with those reported in the vaccine groups.

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In this article, we provide an overview of transference-focused psychotherapy for patients with pathological narcissism and narcissistic personality disorder (TFP-N). In TFP-N we have modified and refined the tactics and techniques of TFP, an evidence-based treatment for borderline personality disorder, to meet the specific challenges of working with patients with narcissistic personality pathology whose retreat from reality into an illusory grandiosity makes them particularly difficult to engage in treatment. We first describe a model of narcissistic pathology based on considerations of psychological structure stemming from object relations theory.

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Counselling and psychotherapy service use in Chinese sexual minority populations: a nationwide survey.

BMC Psychiatry

January 2021

National Clinical Research Center for Mental Disorders, Department of Psychiatry, and China National Technology Institute on Mental Disorders, The Second Xiangya Hospital of Central South University, Changsha, 410011, Hunan, China.

Background: This study investigated the prevalence and factors associated with counselling and psychotherapy service use among Chinese sexual minority populations.

Methods: A nationwide cross-sectional study was performed using snowball sampling method, which led to the inclusion of 18,193 participants. Participants' sociodemographic background, clinical, and psychological data were gathered.

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An Introduction to Psychotherapeutic Engagements With LGBTQ+ Patients and Their Families.

Focus (Am Psychiatr Publ)

July 2020

Columbia Center for Psychoanalytic Training and Research, Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons; Postdoctoral Program in Psychotherapy and Psychoanalysis, New York University.

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The victim-bully cycle of sexual minority school adolescents in China: prevalence and the association of mood problems and coping strategies.

Epidemiol Psychiatr Sci

November 2020

National Clinical Research Center for Mental Disorders, Department of Psychiatry, and China National Technology Institute on Mental Disorders, The Second Xiangya Hospital of Central South University, Changsha, 410011, Hunan, China.

Aims: Compared to their heterosexual peers, youth who identify as lesbian, gay or bisexual (LGB) tend to suffer higher rates of peer victimisation from bullying. However, studies of LGB adolescents' participation as bullies are scarce. We aimed to examine the possible association of sexual minority identity and the heightened risk of not only being bullied but bullying others as well.

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Mental Health Status of Cisgender and Gender-Diverse Secondary School Students in China.

JAMA Netw Open

October 2020

National Clinical Research Center for Mental Disorders, Department of Psychiatry, and China National Technology Institute on Mental Disorders, The Second Xiangya Hospital of Central South University, Changsha, China.

Importance: Transgender or gender nonconforming (TGNC) adolescents face a wide range of physical and mental health concerns. However, there has been no school-based study to explore the prevalence and mental health status of these adolescents in mainland China.

Objectives: To assess the mental well-being of TGNC adolescents in China by comparing them with their cisgender peers.

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Olivia Juliette Hooker (1915-2018).

Am Psychol

April 2020

Postdoctoral Program in Psychotherapy and Psychoanalysis, New York University.

Presents an obituary for Olivia Juliette Hooker (1915-2018). Olivia's capacity to overcome adversity began at age 6. During the Tulsa Race Riot of 1921, the community that provided her affirmation and stability was destroyed.

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Discrimination against LGBT populations in China.

Lancet Public Health

September 2019

The National Clinical Research Center for Mental Disorders, Beijing Key Laboratory of Mental Disorders & Advanced Innovation Center for Human Brain Protection, Beijing Anding Hospital, Capital Medical University, Beijing 100088, China; Department of Psychiatry, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK. Electronic address:

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Present an obituary for Jeremy David Safran (1952-2018). In 1993, Safran became full professor and director of clinical training at the New School for Social Research. At the New School, he developed the program with an affiliation to Beth Israel Medical Center, where he was a principal consultant on a psychotherapy research program founded by Arnold Winston and directed by me.

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Integrating Citizenship, Embodiment, and Relationality: Towards a Reconceptualization of Dance and Dementia in Long-Term Care.

J Law Med Ethics

September 2018

Pia Kontos has a Ph.D. in Public Health Sciences (University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada), and is a Senior Scientist at the Toronto Rehabilitation Institute - University Health Network and Associate Professor in the Dalla Lana School of Public Health, University of Toronto. She is a critical scholar committed to the transformation of long-term dementia care so it is more humanistic and socially just. She draws on the arts (e.g., music, dance, improvisational play) to enrich the lives of people living with dementia. She also creates research-based dramas to effect personal and organizational change. She has published across multiple disciplines on embodiment, relationality, ethics, and dementia. Alisa Grigorovich has a Ph.D. in Gender, Feminist & Women's Studies (York University, Toronto, Ontario, Canada) and is a postdoctoral fellow in the Dalla Lana School of Public Health at the University of Toronto. Her research focuses on the organization of care, health equity and ethics, with a focus on sexuality and dementia. In her postdoctoral research she is exploring the management of sexuality in long-term residential care.

Dance, as aesthetic self-expression, is a unique arts-based program that combines the physical benefits of exercise with psychosocial therapeutic benefits. While dance has also been shown to support empowerment, meaningful self-expression, and pleasurable experience, it is rarely adopted to support these aspects of engagement in the context of dementia care. The instrumental reduction of dance to its application as a therapeutic tool can be traced to the contemporary movement towards cognitive science with an emphasis on embodied cognition.

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