Title Social media and its impact on therapeutic relationships /
Authors Kaluževičiūtė, Greta
DOI 10.1111/bjp.12545
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Is Part of British journal of psychotherapy.. Hoboken : Blackwell Publishing Ltd. 2020, vol. 36, no. 2, p. 303-320.. ISSN 0265-9883. eISSN 1752-0118
Keywords [eng] online disinhibition ; psychoanalysis ; psychotherapy ; social media ; solipsistic introjection ; therapeutic frame ; therapeutic neutrality ; therapeutic relationships
Abstract [eng] In the current age of social media, the boundaries between the online and the offline, the personal and the professional, have become blurred and ambiguous. This poses significant challenges to the practice of psychoanalysis, which for a long time has been thought of as a technology-free and private space. This paper compares how social media impacts therapeutic relationships in the broader field of psychotherapy and in psychoanalytic psychotherapy in particular. Direct breaches in therapist privacy were found to be more frequent with non-psychoanalytic psychotherapists due to therapists’ higher online presence. Psychoanalytic psychotherapists, on the other hand, generally have a lesser online presence because of different views on therapeutic anonymity from other clinical orientations. The author suggests that this leads to different forms of virtual impingements: due to the absence of psychoanalytic therapists’ online presence, patients seek to re-create therapists (and, by extension, therapeutic situations) on a virtual level rather than discover something that was already ‘put out there’ by therapists. Virtual manifestations of anonymity, splitting, and solipsistic introjection processes are discussed with reference to John Suler's concept of the online disinhibition effect. Further recommendations for research on social media impact are discussed.
Published Hoboken : Blackwell Publishing Ltd
Type Journal article
Language English
Publication date 2020
CC license CC license description