Abstract

This article gives an overview of the reference theories underlying group analytic supervision and its clinical applications in medicine and psychotherapy. It begins with a historical approach to the term and its classification. The theoretical foundation is provided by the presentation of basic psycho-, group- and sociodynamic models and supervision concepts up to modern intersubjective and mentalisation-based approaches. Clinical implications of group analytic supervision are described in their functions and variants. Finally, the group-analytic Balint group is contrasted with group-analytic supervision in its different methodologies.

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