The therapeutic relationship has historically been seen as the cornerstone of mental health nursing. This view has recently been challenged through arguments that only evidence obtained from positivistic research should inform mental health practice and the seemingly vaguer aspects involved in developing therapeutic relationships should be ignored in favour of psychotechnology. Opponents of this view consider this perspective to be constructed under a biomedical model and therefore irrelevant to mental health nurses, users and carers.
It has been suggested that people greatly value the therapeutic relationship and that its contribution to recovery is considerable. However, the sufficiency of the alliance as a means to sustainable improvement is questionable and more structured approaches to psychological therapy may prove to be increasingly relevant to the future practice of mental health nursing. While, traditionally, CBT practitioners have prized the technical components of method, the development of a therapeutic relationship is not exclusive to the person- centred approach and is crucial to the assessment, formula- tion and treatment in cognitive behavioural techniques.
The therapeutic relationship has historically been seen as the cornerstone of mental health nursing. This view has recently been challenged through arguments that only evidence obtained from positivistic research should inform mental health practice and the seemingly vaguer aspects involved in developing therapeutic relationships should be ignored in favour of psychotechnology. Opponents of this view consider this perspective to be constructed under a biomedical model and therefore irrelevant to mental health nurses, users and carers.
It has been suggested that people greatly value the therapeutic relationship and that its contribution to recovery is considerable. However, the sufficiency of the alliance as a means to sustainable improvement is questionable and more structured approaches to psychological therapy may prove to be increasingly relevant to the future practice of mental health nursing. While, traditionally, CBT practitioners have prized the technical components of method, the development of a therapeutic relationship is not exclusive to the person- centred approach and is crucial to the assessment, formula- tion and treatment in cognitive behavioural techniques.
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The therapeutic relationship has historically been seen as the cornerstone of mental health nursing. This view has recently been challenged through arguments that only evidence obtained from positivistic research should inform mental health practice and the seemingly vaguer aspects involved in developing therapeutic relationships should be ignored in favour of psychotechnology. Opponents of this view consider this perspective to be constructed under a biomedical model and therefore irrelevant to mental health nurses, users and carers.
It has been suggested that people greatly value the therapeutic relationship and that its contribution to recovery is considerable. However, the sufficiency of the alliance as a means to sustainable improvement is questionable and more structured approaches to psychological therapy may prove to be increasingly relevant to the future practice of mental health nursing. While, traditionally, CBT practitioners have prized the technical components of method, the development of a therapeutic relationship is not exclusive to the person- centred approach and is crucial to the assessment, formula- tion and treatment in cognitive behavioural techniques.
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