1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910464674503321

Autore

Molnos Angela

Titolo

Our Responses to a Deadly Virus : The Group-Analytic Approach / / by Angela Molnos

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Boca Raton, FL : , : Routledge, , [2018]

©1990

ISBN

0-429-90287-5

0-429-47810-0

1-78241-299-9

Edizione

[First edition.]

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (246 p.)

Collana

New Library of Psychoanalysis

Disciplina

616.97/92/0019

Soggetti

Group psychoanalysis

AIDS (Disease) - Psychological aspects

Electronic books.

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Note generali

Description based upon print version of record.

Nota di bibliografia

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Nota di contenuto

Cover; Table of Contents; Acknowledgements; Abbreviations; Preface; Foreword; Introduction; Part One: The Psychological and Social Impact of a Virus; 1. The Reversal of Meanings, Values and Attitudes; The Sinister Features of the Retrovirus Called HIV; The Language around HIV/AIDS and Semantic Distortions; Values and Attitudes; 2. Anxieties and Emotions of Individuals Affected by HIV/ARC/AIDS; Before the HIV Test Result; HIV -Positive Test Result; The Appearance of ARC; Diagnosis: AIDS; 3. The Relevance of Group Analysis; The AIDS Crisis and Group Analysis; Theoretical Assumptions

The Practice of Group-Analytic PsychotherapyApplication to Staff Support Groups; 4. Healing Power and Destructive Power of Groups; Part Two: Group Responses to the AIDS Crisis: Experiences from a Workshop; 5. From the First Idea to the Final Format; The Aims of the Workshop; The First Ideas; The Way in; Towards the Final Format; 6. Participants, Staff and the Spirit of the Workshop; 7. The Four Talks; Introductory Talk; 'The Power of Groups'; 'Reactions in and Around a Hospital's AIDS Team'; 'The AIDS Crisis and Society at Large'; 8. The Unspeakable Emerges from the non-Fishbowl



The Bridge between the Small Groups and the Workshop as a WholeThe Conductor's Personal Account; The non-Fishbowl Seen by a Participant; Other Participants' Responses; Group-Analytic Considerations; 9. What Happened Behind Seven Closed Doors?; Composition of the Small Groups; The Nature of the Reports; Reports by Group Members and Conductors; A Group-Analytic Overview of the Seven Groups; 10. Facing the Darkness in the Last Plenary Session; Summary; Extracts; 11. The Participants' Evaluation of the Workshop; Positive Aspects of the Workshop; Negative Aspects of the Workshop

12. Lessons Derived from the Workshop13. Recommendations; Part Three: Looking Towards the Future; 14. Strange Phenomena; 15. Group-Analytic and Other Group Work in a World that Lives With AIDS; We are All Involved; Group Versus Secrecy and Isolation; Groups for the Carers: sharing the Uncertainties; Support Group for Health Advisers at the Praed Street Clinic; The Use of Non-Group-Analytic Techniques; The Group-Analytic Thread; Postscript; Appendices; Ia: Leaflet; Ib: Registration Form; II: Members of Staff and Speakers; III: Group Conductors' Meeting; IV: Programme for Staff

V: Programme for ParticipantsVI: Evaluation Form; References and Bibliography; Index; Back Cover

Sommario/riassunto

As a group analyst concerned with social and psychological issues,the authorbrings a unique perspective to bear on the problems raised, both for society and the individual, by the confusion and prejudice surrounding HIV infection and the AIDS epidemic. Recognizing that these problems can vitiate even the most enlightened health care policies, she draws on her experience gained by working in several countries to put the case for the application of group analysis, through the organization of staff support groups, to those directly concerned with policy implementation: The carers themselves. In the first part of her book the author demonstrates how, if unchecked, conscious and unconscious prejudice can promote destructive tendencies within groups involved with HIV and AIDS patients. The second part recounts the author's experiences, and insights gained, during the course of a workshop convened in London in December 1987. The third and final section puts forward the case for applying group analysis to health services in the HIV/AIDS sphere.