Freud’s Architecture of Hysteria: Then and Now the Pathways to Feminine Identity at MITPP

The Metropolitan Institute for Training in Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy,
The Metropolitan Center for Mental Health and The Metropolitan Society of Psychoanalytic Psychotherapists Invite you to a Scientific Meeting 

Friday, February 1, 2019 – 7:30 PM   FREUD’S ARCHITECTURE OF HYSTERIA: THEN AND NOW THE PATHWAY TO FEMININE IDENTITY

PRESENTERS: Susan N. Finkelstein, LCSW Maria Teresa Flores, M.D.
Masha Mimran, Ph.D.  

Freud’s hysteria and psychic architecture: démodé or still relevant today?  Then and now, hysterical features and its diagnosis have shifted, Continue reading Freud’s Architecture of Hysteria: Then and Now the Pathways to Feminine Identity at MITPP

Annual Admissions Open House at WCSPP

The Westchester Center for the Study of Psychoanalysis and Psychotherapy  ANNUAL ADMISSIONS OPEN HOUSE Saturday, February 2, 2019
9:00 – 11:30 a.m.

Learn about training opportunities for Fall 2019
in: Psychotherapy Psychoanalysis Child & Adolescent Psychotherapy
Couples Therapy Supervision Meet current candidates and faculty

Our post-graduate training opportunities have been restructured to allow more individual flexibility in the content and timing of training.
*  *  *  *  *
Dream presentation and discussion
Continue reading Annual Admissions Open House at WCSPP

NYPSI: WORKS IN PROGRESS SEMINAR On the Origins of Psychiatric Illness: Schizophrenia as an Example with René S. Kahn, M.D., Ph.D. at NYPSI

NYPSI: WORKS IN PROGRESS SEMINAR On the Origins of Psychiatric Illness: Schizophrenia as an Example with René S. Kahn, M.D., Ph.D. Soul Shadow series. Surreal portrait of female face fused with colored fractal nebula texture on the subject of dreams_ nightmares_ imagination_ mental health_ creativity and human mind 

Wed, January 9, 2019, 8 – 10 pm New York Psychoanalytic Society & Institute
247 East 82nd Street, NYC (btwn 2nd and 3rd Aves) $20 – General Admission
$15 – Student Admission No charge for NYPSI members/students Register HERE, visit nypsi.org or call 212.879.6900

Schizophrenia is currently classified as a psychotic disorder. This paper will attempt to show that this emphasis on psychosis is a conceptual fallacy that has greatly contributed to the lack of progress in our understanding of this illness and hence has hampered the development of adequate treatments. Not only have cognitive and intellectual underperformance consistently been shown to be risk factors for schizophrenia, several studies find that a decline in cognitive functioning precedes the onset of psychosis by almost a decade. Although the question of whether cognitive function continues to decline after psychosis onset is still debated, it is clear that cognitive function in schizophrenia is related to outcome and little influenced by antipsychotic treatment. Thus, our focus on defining (and preventing) the disorder on the basis of psychotic symptoms may be too narrow. Not only should cognition be recognized as the core component of the disorder, our diagnostic efforts should emphasize the changes in cognitive function that occur earlier in development. Putting the focus back on cognition may facilitate finding treatments for the illness before psychosis ever emerges.

Continue reading NYPSI: WORKS IN PROGRESS SEMINAR On the Origins of Psychiatric Illness: Schizophrenia as an Example with René S. Kahn, M.D., Ph.D. at NYPSI