This paper contends that sociotherapy, a sociologically informed approach to therapy, is a viable alternative to the diagnostic model recognized by the College of Registered Psychotherapists in Ontario (CRPO). The Psychotherapy Act (2007) along with the Regulated Health Professions Act (1991) gives the CRPO authorization to regulate the practice of psychotherapy and to control titles affiliated with the act of psychotherapy. I offer a discussion of sociotherapy and socioanalysis as clinical alternatives to the conservative and normalizing approaches endorsed by the College. I situate sociotherapy and socioanalysis in the discipline of sociology and in relation to Freudian psychoanalysis. I offer my own sociotherapeutic practice as an illustration of how the societal and the psychological, the social, and the psychic must be engaged in concert. I underscore the importance of dialogue, as opposed to diagnostics, interpretation as opposed to assessments and psychosocial contemplation as opposed to cognitive-behavioral treatment in clinical practice.
Keyphrases
- healthcare
- mental health
- clinical practice
- primary care
- borderline personality disorder
- coronavirus disease
- posttraumatic stress disorder
- sars cov
- public health
- quality improvement
- transcription factor
- health information
- combination therapy
- bone marrow
- sleep quality
- risk assessment
- depressive symptoms
- social media
- mesenchymal stem cells
- respiratory syndrome coronavirus