Current Practices in General Hospital Group Psychotherapy

The purpose of this survey study was to evaluate the current practice of inpatient group therapy in general hospital psychiatric units in a southeastern state and to determine whether there was a need for a more systematic method of designing, implementing, and evaluating general hospital group ther...

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Main Author: Farley, Patrick N.
Other Authors: Counselor Education
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/30406
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-3198-142012/
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-304062020-09-29T05:37:51Z Current Practices in General Hospital Group Psychotherapy Farley, Patrick N. Counselor Education Hutchins, David E. Fortune, Jimmie C. Curcio, Claire Cole Vaught Getz, Hilda M. Wooten, Lynn Group Counseling Group Pentagon Inpatient Group Therapy The purpose of this survey study was to evaluate the current practice of inpatient group therapy in general hospital psychiatric units in a southeastern state and to determine whether there was a need for a more systematic method of designing, implementing, and evaluating general hospital group therapy. A second major purpose was to test a model to determine if it could be used to evaluate current practices of general hospital psychiatric group therapy on a more global basis. The history of group therapy and current nationwide statistical data relating to general hospital psychiatric units were summarized. A survey which addressed unit operations, unit staffing patterns, types of patients, and general practices regarding psychiatric unit group therapy was administered to 35 general hospital psychiatric unit administrators in a southeastern state. A standard interview protocol was developed and administered on-site to six group therapy practitioners. These interviews gathered information relative to specific unit group therapy practices, evaluated whether Group Pentagon components were utilized in group therapy practices, and identified factors influencing unit group therapy practice. An analysis of the available literature indicated there was little information relative to the practice of group therapy on general hospital psychiatric units. The literature analysis also revealed no consistent model or procedures for the design, implementation, and evaluation of group therapy in general hospital psychiatric units. The survey and interviews demonstrated that group therapy programs appeared fragmented, varied across units, and did not appear to be designed, implemented, or evaluated in a consistent manner. During the interviews, the practitioners described the lack of many of the conditions necessary for the provision of effective group therapy on their general hospital psychiatric units. The literature review analysis, survey, and interviews indicated the components of the Group Pentagon were not utilized in general hospital group therapy programs. The Group Pentagon provided a useful model for evaluating overall group therapy programs, as well as reviewing specific group therapy procedures. Finally, this research established a protocol for evaluating general hospital and potentially other group therapy practices. Ed. D. 2014-03-14T20:21:38Z 2014-03-14T20:21:38Z 1998-02-11 1998-02-11 1998-04-01 1998-04-01 Dissertation etd-3198-142012 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/30406 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-3198-142012/ dissert.pdf In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Group Counseling
Group Pentagon
Inpatient Group Therapy
spellingShingle Group Counseling
Group Pentagon
Inpatient Group Therapy
Farley, Patrick N.
Current Practices in General Hospital Group Psychotherapy
description The purpose of this survey study was to evaluate the current practice of inpatient group therapy in general hospital psychiatric units in a southeastern state and to determine whether there was a need for a more systematic method of designing, implementing, and evaluating general hospital group therapy. A second major purpose was to test a model to determine if it could be used to evaluate current practices of general hospital psychiatric group therapy on a more global basis. The history of group therapy and current nationwide statistical data relating to general hospital psychiatric units were summarized. A survey which addressed unit operations, unit staffing patterns, types of patients, and general practices regarding psychiatric unit group therapy was administered to 35 general hospital psychiatric unit administrators in a southeastern state. A standard interview protocol was developed and administered on-site to six group therapy practitioners. These interviews gathered information relative to specific unit group therapy practices, evaluated whether Group Pentagon components were utilized in group therapy practices, and identified factors influencing unit group therapy practice. An analysis of the available literature indicated there was little information relative to the practice of group therapy on general hospital psychiatric units. The literature analysis also revealed no consistent model or procedures for the design, implementation, and evaluation of group therapy in general hospital psychiatric units. The survey and interviews demonstrated that group therapy programs appeared fragmented, varied across units, and did not appear to be designed, implemented, or evaluated in a consistent manner. During the interviews, the practitioners described the lack of many of the conditions necessary for the provision of effective group therapy on their general hospital psychiatric units. The literature review analysis, survey, and interviews indicated the components of the Group Pentagon were not utilized in general hospital group therapy programs. The Group Pentagon provided a useful model for evaluating overall group therapy programs, as well as reviewing specific group therapy procedures. Finally, this research established a protocol for evaluating general hospital and potentially other group therapy practices. === Ed. D.
author2 Counselor Education
author_facet Counselor Education
Farley, Patrick N.
author Farley, Patrick N.
author_sort Farley, Patrick N.
title Current Practices in General Hospital Group Psychotherapy
title_short Current Practices in General Hospital Group Psychotherapy
title_full Current Practices in General Hospital Group Psychotherapy
title_fullStr Current Practices in General Hospital Group Psychotherapy
title_full_unstemmed Current Practices in General Hospital Group Psychotherapy
title_sort current practices in general hospital group psychotherapy
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/30406
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-3198-142012/
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