A preliminary sketch of a Jungian socioanalysis – an emerging theory combining analytical psychology, complexity theories, sociological theories, socio‐ and psycho‐analysis, group analysis and affect theories 1

2021 ◽  
Vol 66 (2) ◽  
pp. 301-322
Author(s):  
Dorte Odde ◽  
Arne Vestergaard
Blood ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 118 (21) ◽  
pp. 12-12
Author(s):  
Morey A. Blinder ◽  
Francis Vekeman ◽  
Alex Trahey ◽  
Medha Sasane ◽  
Carole S. Paley ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 12 Background: For patients with SCD, blood transfusion (tf) is the mainstay of treatment to prevent and alleviate SCD complications. Though the majority of patients in pediatric care often receive optimal preventive care, discrepancies are seen in care management of patients transitioning from pediatric to adult care as well as in adult patients. The study objectives were to evaluate blood transfusions patterns and incidence of SCD complications in pediatric and adult patients with a focus on those transitioning from pediatric to adult care. Methods: State Medicaid data from the FL (1998–2009), NJ (1996–2009), MO (1997–2010), IA (1998–2010), and KS (2001–2009) were used for this study. Patients with ≥2 SCD diagnoses (ICD-9 282.6x) and ≥1 tf following the 2nd SCD diagnosis were included in the analysis. Patients were followed for as long as they were enrolled in Medicaid. Quarterly rates of tf events, SCD complications, and prescriptions of hydroxyurea were calculated. Each tf event was defined as a unique day when at least one procedure code for packed RBCs, whole blood, or exchange tf was recorded. SCD complications included pain, infection, stroke, cardiomyopathy, renal disease, and Moyamoya disease. A logistic regression was used to assess associations between tf and transition age (<18 vs ≥18 yrs), population density of living area (urban, suburban, rural), state of residence, and SCD complications. An interaction term of transition age and SCD complications was also included to isolate the impact of SCD complications on tf between the pediatric and adult periods. Other covariates included prescription of hydroxyurea, tf during the previous quarter, other relevant medications (e.g.: pain medication, diuretics, anticoagulants), comorbidities (e.g.: hypertension, myocardial infarction, liver disease), and, serving as proxies for overall health status, the frequency of hospitalizations, emergency, and outpatient visits during the previous quarter. Results: A total of 3,208 patients were included (FL: 1,550, NJ: 992, MO: 489, KS: 121, IA: 56) in the study. Each patient was observed for an average (SD) of 6.0 (3.1) years. About 73% of patients lived in an urban area, 23% lived in suburban area, and 4% lived in a rural area. The rate of tf had a distinct bimodal pattern over ages. The rate of blood tf increased from 0.25 tf/pt/quarter at 1 year of age to a maximum of 0.54 tf/pt/quarter at 16 years old (Figure 1). After age 16, the tf rate decreased sharply to 0.29 tf/pt/quarter at age 26, and remained relatively stable thereafter. In contrast, the frequency of diagnoses for SCD complications increased markedly after age 16, reaching 2.92 diagnoses/pt/quarter at 28 years old and 3.50 diagnoses/pt/quarter at 40 years old (Figure 2). Pain was the most common complication, followed by infection, and renal disease. The frequency of diagnoses for cardiomyopathy slowly increased between 18 and 42 years old from 0.05 to 0.36 diagnoses/pt/quarter and then more than doubled to reach 0.80 diagnoses/pt/quarter at age 45 (Figure 2). Hydroxyurea use increased steadily up until age 18 and declined thereafter (Figure 1). Prescriptions for pain medications rose in a linear fashion from age 15 to 35 years from an average of 0.61 prescription/pt/quarter to 3.05 prescriptions/pt/quarter, and stayed high until the end of follow up. Results from the logistic regression showed that patients were less likely to receive blood tf post transition age (odds ratio [OR], ≥18 years old: 0.85, p=.014) and when receiving hydroxyurea (OR: 0.82, p<.001). In contrast, patients were more likely to receive tf if they lived in urban or suburban areas compared to rural areas (OR, urban: 3.65; suburban: 3.40; p<.001 for both) and experienced SCD complications (OR: 2.66, p<.001). The positive association between SCD complication and tf was stronger post transition age (OR, interaction between SCD complication and older age: 1.39, p<.001). Conclusions: Patients transitioning to adult care are transfused less frequently than pediatric patients and suffer from more frequent SCD related complications. These findings highlight the changes in treatment patterns corresponding to transition to adult care. While age related increases in SCD complications may be anticipated, the dramatic increase in complications along with the decline in tf frequency are likely to be due at least in part to inadequate transition to adult providers. Disclosures: Blinder: Novartis: Honoraria. Vekeman:Analysis Group: Analysis group received research grant from Novartis pharmaceuticals, Employment. Trahey:Analysis Group: Analysis Group received research grant from Novartis Pharmaceuticals, Employment. Sasane:Novartis Pharmaceuticals: Employment. Paley:Novartis Pharmaceuticals: Employment. Duh:Analysis Group: Analysis Group received research grant from Novartis Pharmaceuticals, Employment.


Blood ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 118 (21) ◽  
pp. 338-338
Author(s):  
Morey A. Blinder ◽  
Francis Vekeman ◽  
Alex Trahey ◽  
Medha Sasane ◽  
Carole S. Paley ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 338 Background: For patients (pts) with SCD receiving regular blood transfusions (tf), iron chelation therapy (ICT) alleviates complications associated with iron overload. Pediatric pts tend to receive comprehensive care, including blood tf to avoid SCD-related complication and, as necessary, ICT. However, as pts transition to adult care, follow up is less constant and discrepancies are seen in care management. The aim of this study is to evaluate tf patterns, utilization of ICT among chronically transfused pts, and healthcare costs in pediatric and adult pts with a focus on the transitioning period from pediatric to adult care. Methods: State Medicaid data from the FL (1998–2009), NJ (1996–2009), MO (1997–2010), IA (1998–2010), and KS (2001–2009) were used for this study. Pts with ≥2 SCD diagnoses (ICD-9 282.6x) and ≥1 tf following the 2nd SCD diagnosis were included. Pts were followed for as long as they were enrolled in Medicaid. Pts were considered chronically transfused from the time of their 8th tf. Each tf event was defined as a unique day when ≥1 procedure code for packed RBCs, whole blood, or exchange tf was recorded. Quarterly rate of tf was calculated among all SCD pts and proportion of pts receiving ICT was calculated among pts who received ≥8 tf. Quarterly healthcare costs, stratified by outpatient (OP) and inpatient (IP) services and prescription drug (Rx) costs were calculated. Regression analyses were conducted to identify the main drivers of healthcare costs among pts with ≥8 tf. Covariates included, among others, transition age (<18 vs ≥18 yrs), SCD complications (pain, infection, stroke, cardiomyopathy, renal disease, and Moyamoya disease), current and previous tf, prescription of hydroxyurea, relevant comorbidities, and resources utilization. Results: 3,208 pts were included (FL: 1,550, NJ: 992, MO: 489, KS: 121, IA: 56) in the study. Each pt was observed for an average (SD) of 6.0 (3.1) yrs. 917 pts received ≥8 tf during their observation period. The proportion of pts with ≥8 tf increased from 4% at 2 yrs of age to approximately 24% at 16 yrs old (Fig 1). The proportion of pts with ≥8 tf remained relatively stable around 20% thereafter, in contrast with the overall rate of tf which decreased after age 16. The proportion of chelated pts increased from 4% at 2 yrs of age to a maximum of 50% at age 13 (Fig 1). The proportion of chelated pts then decreased steadily during the following 10 yrs to reach 10% at age 23 and oscillated around that level thereafter. Healthcare costs increased from ages 5 to 19 for all SCD pts ($3,907 to $10,317 per pt-quarter) and those with ≥8 tf ($4,500 to $15,078 per pt-quarter), and remained high through adulthood. Pts with ≥8 tf had greater healthcare costs than the overall SCD population at all ages. Despite the higher Rx costs, pts receiving ICT incurred statistically significantly lower IP costs than chronically transfused pts receiving no ICT, resulting in no statistically significant cost difference (unadjusted cost difference, Rx: $2,285, p<.001; OP: $851, p=.156; IP: -$2,584, p<.001; total: $552, p=.493 [Table 1]; adjusted cost difference, Rx: $2,746, p<.001; OP: -$813, p=.036; IP: -$936, p<.001; total: $61, p=.098). Regression analyses also revealed that SCD complications was the main driver of healthcare costs among pts with ≥8 tf (incremental cost increase: $3,955; p<.001). Conclusions: Pts transitioning to adult care received less tf and ICT when chronically transfused, and had higher healthcare costs than pediatric pts. While other age-related factors are likely to impact SCD treatment patterns and healthcare resource utilization, the marked decrease in tf and proportion of chelated pts and increase in healthcare costs during the transition from pediatric to adult care suggest that tf and ICT are markers for lower healthcare costs in SCD patients. Disclosures: Blinder: Novartis: Honoraria. Vekeman:Analysis Group: Analysis Group has received research grant from Novartis pharmeceuticals, Employment. Trahey:Analysis Group: Analysis group received research grant from Novartis Pharmaceuticals, Employment. Sasane:Novartis Pharmaceuticals: Employment. Paley:Novartis Pharmaceuticals: Employment. Duh:Analysis Group: Analysis group received research grant from Novartis Pharmaceuticals, Employment.


2006 ◽  
Vol 39 (3) ◽  
pp. 295-303 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dieter Nitzgen

This paper presents a general overview of the challenges which the practice of group analysis continues to face in the field of clinical research, highlighting some of the social changes and economic pressures which influence and affect these challenges. Economic constraints are highlighted, with some suggestions as to how group analysis can develop in order to endeavour to meet the needs of different types of patients, as well as satisfying the ever-changing demands of health services and organizations.


2017 ◽  
Vol 50 (2) ◽  
pp. 238-254
Author(s):  
Juan Tubert-Oklander

The relational perspective of analysis is a way of looking at, practising, and understanding the whole of analysis—including psycho-analysis, group-analysis, and socio-analysis—rather than a specific school of psychoanalysis. Farhad Dalal’s excellent article describes the evolution of his thinking and practice, from a classical analytic stance to a relational conception of it. There are two ways of conceiving and practising psychoanalysis, which he calls ‘the analytic’ and ‘the relational’, derived from two contrasting conceptions of the world and of life. This generates a split between theory and practice in analysis. Some practitioners adhere to the classical view, but are actually relational in their practice; others have adopted relational theory, but maintain the detached scientific attitude of the classical Freudian analyst. Freud’s abandonment of the traumatic theory of neuroses had unconscious sources that determined the injunction for analysts not to be relational. Group analysis, on the other hand, has been relational from the beginning. S.H. Foulkes had a contradiction between his adherence to Freudian theory and the revolutionary aspects of his thinking and practice—what Dalal calls ‘radical Foulkes’. The hierarchical, detached, and emotionally closed off form of relating prescribed by classical analysis is anti-therapeutic. By contrast, the kind of therapeutic relation that Dalal strives to develop has connotations with engagement, reciprocity and mutuality, and may generate corrective emotional experiences. But human events are never fully explained or predictable, so that the corrective emotional experience is an occurrence, not a technique. The analyst works in a radical uncertainty and can only be guided by his intuition, which has then to be checked by rational critical analysis. This generates a dialectic tension between imagination and rigour, which must be kept and nursed, not solved. This corresponds to an analogical hermeneutic stance, which rejects both the dogmatic univocality of Modernism and the relativistic equivocality of Postmodernism. The analyst must respond with his whole being, and this being must be developed through a process of personality development, not training but formation (Bildung in German). This implies a particular epistemology, ontology, axiology, and ethics, a whole Weltanschauung and Lebensanschauung that includes the Golden Braid of thinking, feeling, and acting, on a basis of relating.


2017 ◽  
Vol 50 (4) ◽  
pp. 519-536 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christine Thornton

Several aspects of group analysis render it a useful discipline for consulting to organizations and working with teams in complex post-modern environments. These include attention to the individual in the group, sophisticated grasp of the nuances of interpersonal communication, attention to context, tolerance and the value of multiple perspectives, creative incorporation of difference and a flexible developmental approach to managing anxiety and leadership projections. The importance assigned to context, and the value placed on multiple perspectives as holding elements of reality, mesh with systems and complexity theories so that group analysis offers a coherent intellectual framework for understanding interplaying processes in the system, from individual, through team, departmental and organizational, to societal and global levels. While several writers have demonstrated the value of group analytic thinking in understanding organizations, to date none have attempted to contextualize their perspective with those of others working in the field. This article opens with a literature review, articulates some core contextual differences between clinical and organizational work, and identifies the characteristics of group analysis that make it a valuable discipline in organizational work. A second companion article elaborates, setting out further differences in praxis in organizational rather than therapeutic work and discussing contracting for organizational work.


1974 ◽  
Vol 7 (3) ◽  
pp. 165-178
Author(s):  
Romano Fiumara ◽  
Murray Cox

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