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Tavistock Clinic
The Tavistock Clinic, named for its original location in Tavistock Square, Bloomsbury, is a noted centre for psychoanalytic therapy in the British NHS. It offers outpatient clinical services in London and provides many postgraduate training and academic courses for professionals in mental health, social care and organisational consulting. Since 1967 the clinic has been located at The Tavistock Centre, in Swiss Cottage. Additional recommended knowledgeAccording to the official history of the Tavistock Clinic:
The early wartime experiences still "influence the clinic's work in group teaching and work discussion, in consultancy, in the understanding of early separation from parents (as happened during evacuation of children) and in the treatment of trauma. Today, the Trauma Unit offers a training workshop in the understanding of trauma and its treatment and is called on to offer help in national and international disasters. This work is described in Understanding Trauma published in 1998 by Karnac Books, one of the many texts in the Tavistock Book Series." [2] Currently the name Tavistock Clinic is used only to refer to the British National Health Service (NHS) clinic, offering psychotherapy and other mental health services. A history of the Clinic can be found on the website of the Tavistock & Portman NHS Foundation Trust [3], of which it is the major part [4]. This NHS ownership began in 1948 when the British NHS was founded, other Tavistock activities being continued by other organisations, in particular the Tavistock Institute. Notable peopleR. D. Laing is one of the prominent psychiatrists who was associated with the Tavistock. Laing, who also served in the British Army Psychiatric Unit, became well known, and highly controversial, for his experimentation with LSD and his views on schizophrenia. Laing suggested that schizophrenia was not a "disease" but rather a state of radical privation[5]. John Rawlings Rees also worked at the Institute for several years prior to World War Two and became its Medical Director [6]. With his colleague William Sargant, he represented a school of psychiatry that stressed the analogy between mental problems and physical illness, consequently favouring physical treatments such as psychosurgery and shock therapy. In the 1970s, the consultant psychiatrist Michael Fordham, editor of the English translations of the Collected Works of Carl Jung, worked at the Tavistock on mother-child observations. |
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Tavistock_Clinic". A list of authors is available in Wikipedia. |