Abstract

Difficult patients - or those with difficult personalities - are frequently encountered in the treatment of chronic non-oncologic pain, overburdening the doctor-patient relationship far beyond the complexities of their illness and treatment. The present review/experiential report discusses the role that projective identification, as a psychological process of communication, puts the doctor-patient relationship in within the multi-professional chronic pain team. The concepts of projective identification are reviewed both in their benign and their malignant forms. Two clinical vignettes exemplify each of them. Some situations in the setting of doctor-patient communication are presented in which projective identification appears and complicates the therapeutic relationship. Some recommendations are offered regarding the handling of patients that communicate mainly by means of projective identification, and some ideas are offered to the multi-professional team. In our chronic pain clinic, difficult patients as a whole seem to prefer to communicate by means of a malignant form of projective identification and present with immature types of personality organizations. Within the chronic pain teams, doctor-patient relationships (as well as relations among the professionals) can be enriched if projective identification is detected early and appropriately handled. Long-term psychotherapy is the treatment that should be chosen for such patients.

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