Society for the Advancement of Psychotherapy

Tag

collective trauma

Articles tagged "collective trauma".

3 articles

When Distress Is Collective: Implications for Clinical Training and Supervision
Student Development+2 more

When Distress Is Collective: Implications for Clinical Training and Supervision

Over the past several years, a recurring pattern has emerged in clinical consultation and supervision among therapists working with clients from diaspora communities affected by war, political repression, migration, and ongoing sociopolitical instability.Many of these clients are not responding primarily to past trauma in the conventional sense. They are responding to circumstances that are still […]

Bahareh Sahebi, PsyD, LMFT

Bahareh Sahebi, PsyD, LMFT

June 22, 2026

Working with Survivors of Covid-19
Assessment & Treatment+2 more

Working with Survivors of Covid-19

At the time this post will be published, according to the Centers for Disease Control (CDC), over 340,000 United States (US) citizens will have died from Covid-19. The psychological toll is incalculable. Thousands more have had traumatizing near-death experiences, including enduring medically-induced coma for the purpose of lung ventilation (Zimmerman et al., 2020). Medical trauma […]

Olivia Carelli, Psy.D.

Olivia Carelli, Psy.D.

January 3, 2021

Navigating the Empathic Process During a Global Pandemic
Psychotherapy Process+2 more

Navigating the Empathic Process During a Global Pandemic

Increasingly, clinical psychology literature points to a relationship between therapists’ self-regulation and their capacity to effectively treat patients.  Indeed, theorists have suggested that therapists’ self-regulation – including their capacity to be self-reflective and mindful with patients – tends to facilitate therapeutic empathy (Buechler, 2008), rupture resolution (Safran & Muran, 2000), and mutual recognition (Benjamin, 2018).  […]

Shannon L. McIntyre, Ph.D.

Shannon L. McIntyre, Ph.D.

August 30, 2020

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