Abstract

In the outpatient treatment of schizophrenia, the routine practice of providing each patient with two co-therapists results in several benefits: reduced dependency, increased expertise, objective monitoring, added support and morale for the therapists, more obvious and therefore more reversible countertransference, more obvious and therefore more treatable "splitting" and "projecting." Despite these benefits, problems arise in the two-therapist arrangement. They are discussed under the following headings: loyalty conflicts; limit setting; crisis management; family work. The authors report on techniques of co-therapy problem prevention and problem resolution. Though not always successful, co-therapy continues to be a useful model of service delivery to schizophrenic outpatients.

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