Treatment of the Borderline Personality
By (Author) Patricia Chatham
Jason Aronson Publishers
Jason Aronson Publishers
7th July 1977
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Psychiatry
616.89
Paperback
608
Width 163mm, Height 229mm, Spine 33mm
794g
Brings the contribution of the developmental perspective to treatment.
Patricia Chatham's Treatment of the Borderline Personality is an excellent, scholarly overview and integration of the psychodynamic perspective on treatment of individuals with borderline personality disorder. The use of three continuous cases throughout the book illustrates the diversity as well as some of the problems with attempts to integrate theoretical approaches and practical reality. This book is a rich, readable, clinically oriented description of the psychodynamic-developmental perspective based on the four theoretical psychoanalytic schools: structural, ego psychology, object relations, and self-psychology. Dr. Chatham draws heavily on Kernberg, whose views she presents in a coherent form. -- David Adler * American Journal of Psychotherapy *
This book is at once a succinct yet comprehensive treatise that brings together the essentials of the psychodynamic-developmental and object-relations literature andmost important for the practicing clinicianapplies them clinically. Remarkable for the author's grasp of the literature, it provides a needed synthesis. -- Donald Rinsley, from the foreword
Patricia M. Chatham, Ph.D., is a staff psychologist and former director of training of the Psychology Service, Veteran's Administration Medical in Reno, Nevada. She is currently clinical associate professor of behavioral sciences at the School of Medicine, University of Nevada, Reno.