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Boundary violations in therapy: the patient's experience of harm

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 July 2018

John Hook*
Affiliation:
Consultant medical psychotherapist in private practice in the UK, having formerly worked as head of psychological therapies services in Southampton and Guildford. He is a member of the Institute of Group Analysis, UK. His clinical interests include personality disorders and medically unexplained symptoms. He is an associate of the Clinic for Boundaries Studies, working with professionals who have a history of misconduct, in particular sexual boundary violations.
Dawn Devereux
Affiliation:
Psychoanalytic psychotherapist in private practice in the UK. She completed a PhD on the patient's experience of psychotherapy. From 2010 to 2016, she was Director of Public Support at the Clinic for Boundaries Studies, where she established and ran a psychotherapy and advocacy service for people who felt harmed through boundary breaches by psychological, medical and complementary practitioners.
*
Correspondence John Hook, 5 Kemishford, Woking GU22 0RL, UK. Email: hook458@btinternet.com
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Summary

Harm in talking therapies, and in healthcare professionals’ relationships with patients generally, has received little attention in comparison with harm by medication and other treatments. There has been little research into causes, types and effects. Professionals behave as if it does not happen and tend to react defensively to complaints. We believe that it is essential for professionals to understand the potential for harm and evaluate their actions in order to make them safer. This article defines harm in the therapeutic context, discusses its prevalence and then focuses on adverse idealising transference: the adverse effects that may arise when a patient transfers idealising feelings onto the professional.

LEARNING OBJECTIVES

  • Develop a greater understanding of the problem of harm in psychotherapy

  • Be aware of adverse idealising transference and its possible harmful implications

  • Be aware of therapist actions that may encourage the development of an adverse idealising transference

DECLARATION OF INTEREST

None.

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Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The Royal College of Psychiatrists 2018 
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