Tag: patient-centered therapy


PHENOMENOLOGICAL THERAPY

Defining Phenomenological Therapy Phenomenological Therapy represents a fundamental shift in therapeutic orientation, distinguishing itself from traditional psychodynamic or cognitive-behavioral models by placing paramount emphasis on the client’s unique, subjective experience. This approach is best characterized as a non-interpretive framework, wherein the primary stress is placed upon the patient’s active management and discovery of their authentic […]

Read More

PERSON IN THE PATIENT

PERSON IN THE PATIENT: A Psychosomatic Perspective on Holistic Recovery The concept of the Person in the Patient serves as a foundational principle within the psychosomatic and holistic approaches to therapeutic care, emphasizing that successful recovery hinges not solely upon treating the disease or the diagnosed pathology, but fundamentally upon engaging the unique and resilient […]

Read More