PSYCHOTHERAPY, PSYCHOTHERAPY patients, RESISTANCE in psychotherapy, NEUROSES, PATHOLOGICAL psychology, PSYCHOANALYSIS, MENTAL health services, NATIONAL health services, PROGNOSIS
Abstract
The article presents a paper that explores the applicability of psycho-analytical psychotherapy in a National Health Service clinic for out-patients who suffer from psychoneuroses in Great Britain. The technique of psychotherapy was based on psychoanalysis in so far as the patients were encouraged to freely associate and priority was given to the elucidation and interpretation of unconscious resistances. The implications of the results and those obtained with individual therapy in cases of long-standing illness cannot be denied or ignored. The results suggests that patients receive benefit from psycho-analytical psychotherapy and justify the initiation of pilot studies which might examine the efficacy of analytical psychotherapy in a manner acceptable to the psychiatrists and physicians.
Presents an overview of bread prices in London, England and Glasgow, Scotland from 1788 to 1815. Applicability of London's experience during Napoleonic Wars to a regional center with different supply patterns, consumer preferences and social customs; Differences in the price history and set of price relationships of the two regions.
This paper describes the epidemiologically relevant events that took place in a dairy herd infected by Salmonella dublin. The evidence presented indicates that it may be possible to eliminate infection from the farm and that residual infection or persistent excretion are uncommon. In two animals infection persisted, in one instance in the tonsil and in the other in the gall bladder. In this latter case the infection remained from the neonatal period until adulthood. It is possible that both these animals are relevant in a more general context and are indicative of the source of infection in outbreaks in which the origin of infection cannot be determined by more routine examinations.