Becoming an emergency psychologist: alterity and presence in a comprehensive not-knowing relationship

Tipo de recurso
Título
Becoming an emergency psychologist: alterity and presence in a comprehensive not-knowing relationship
Resumo
This study aims to analyze the fundamental aspects of training and intervention processes of professionals intending to work in emergency psychological services. Based on a person-centered approach and phenomenology, we consider the psychologist’s openness and presence in the relationship as fundamental to dealing with their own alterity and the alterity of the patient seeking help. We highlight empathy as a way for psychologists to make themselves present and available to decenter and focus on the other. This decentralization can only occur if the psychologist can connect to the present and to what is occurring with themselves, with the other, and especially with the relationship. We conclude, therefore, that emergency psychological service requires being open to the uniqueness of the present and putting the prescriptions of psychotherapy handbooks aside, although without denying them.
Título da publicação
Theory & Psychology
Volume
30
Edição
5
Páginas
690-702
Data
01-10-2020
Idioma
Inglês
ISSN
0959-3543
Título curto
Becoming an emergency psychologist
Data de acesso
23/09/2024 16:48
Catálogo de biblioteca
SAGE Journals
Extra
Publisher: SAGE Publications Ltd
Citation 'apa'
Vieira, E. M., Castelo Branco, P. C., & Ribeiro, G. D. P. D. (2020). Becoming an emergency psychologist: alterity and presence in a comprehensive not-knowing relationship. Theory & Psychology, 30(5), 690–702. https://doi.org/10.1177/0959354320943298
Citation 'abnt'
VIEIRA, E. M.; CASTELO BRANCO, P. C.; RIBEIRO, G. D. P. D. Becoming an emergency psychologist: alterity and presence in a comprehensive not-knowing relationship. Theory & Psychology, v. 30, n. 5, p. 690–702, 10 jan. 2020.