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Dive into the research topics where Susan G. Lazar is active.

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Featured researches published by Susan G. Lazar.


Psychodynamic psychiatry | 2014

Obstacles to Early Career Psychiatrists Practicing Psychotherapy

Norman A. Clemens; Eric M. Plakun; Susan G. Lazar; Lisa A. Mellman

Though psychiatric residents are expected to be competent psychotherapists on graduation, further growth in skill and versatility requires continued experience in their ongoing career. Maturity as a psychotherapist is essential because a psychiatrist is the only mental health provider who, as a physician, can assume full responsibility for biopsychosocial patient care and roles as supervisor, consultant, and team leader. Graduating residents face an environment in which surveys show a steady and alarming decline in practice of psychotherapy by psychiatrists, along with a decline in job satisfaction. High educational debts, practice structures, intrusive management, and reimbursement policies that devalue psychotherapy discourage early career psychiatrists from a practice style that enables providing it. For the early-career psychiatrist there is thus the serious risk of being unable to develop a critical mass of experience or a secure identity as a psychiatric psychotherapist. Implementation of parity laws and the Affordable Care Act (ACA) will affect the situation in unpredictable ways that call for vigilance and active response. Additional service and administrative demands may result from the ACA, creating ethical dilemmas about meeting urgent patient needs versus biopsychosocial standards of care. The authors recommend 1) vigorous advocacy for better payment levels for psychotherapy and freedom from disruptive management; 2) aggressive action against violations of the parity act, 3) active preparation of psychiatric residents for dealing with career choices and the environment for providing psychotherapy in their practice, and 4) post-graduate training in psychotherapy through supervision/consultation, continuing education courses, computer instruction, and distance learning.


Journal of Psychiatric Practice | 2013

Important medical decisions: Using brief motivational interviewing to enhance patients' autonomous decision-making.

Michael V. Pantalon; William H. Sledge; Stephen F. Bauer; Beth Brodsky; Stephanie Giannandrea; Jerald Kay; Susan G. Lazar; Lisa A. Mellman; William C. Offenkrantz; John M. Oldham; Eric M. Plakun; Lawrence H. Rockland

Goals. The use of motivational interviewing (MI) when the goals of patient and physician are not aligned is examined. A clinical example is presented of a patient who, partly due to anxiety and fear, wants to opt out of further evaluation of his hematuria while the physician believes that the patient must follow up on the finding of hematuria. Background. As patients struggle in making decisions about their medical care, physician interactions can become strained and medical care may become compromised. Physicians sometimes rely on their authority within the doctor-patient relationship to assist patients in making decisions. These methods may be ineffective when there is a conflict in motivations or goals, such as with patient ambivalence and resistance. Furthermore, the values of patient autonomy may conflict with the values of beneficence. Method. A patient simulation exercise is used to demonstrate the value of MI in addressing the motivations of a medical patient when autonomy is difficult to realize because of a high level of resistance to change due to fear. Discussion. The salience of MI in supporting the value of patient autonomy without giving up the value of beneficence is discussed by providing a method of evaluating the patient’s best interests by psychotherapeutically addressing his anxious, fear-based ambivalence. (Journal of Psychiatric Practice 2013;19:98–108)


Borderline Personality Disorder and Emotion Dysregulation | 2014

Psychotherapy for suicidal patients with borderline personality disorder: an expert consensus review of common factors across five therapies

William H. Sledge; Eric M. Plakun; Stephen F. Bauer; Beth Brodsky; Eve Caligor; Norman A. Clemens; Serina Deen; Jerald Kay; Susan G. Lazar; Lisa A. Mellman; Michael F. Myers; John M. Oldham; Frank E. Yeomans

The objective was to review established literature on approaches to the psychotherapy of borderline personality disorder with specfic reference to suicide in order to determine if there were common factors across these efforts that would guide future teaching, practice and research.The publications from the proponents of five therapies for the treatment of suicidal behavior in individuals with borderline personality disorder (BPD), were reviewed and discussed by the members of the Group for the Advanced of Psychiatry, Psychotherapy Committee (GAPPC). Twenty nine published research and summary reports were reviewed of the specific treatments noted above along with two other reviews of common factors for this group of treatments. We used expert consensus as to the salient articles for review and the appropriate level of abstraction for the common factor definition. We formulated a definition of effectiveness and identified six common factors: 1) negotiation of a specific frame for treatment, 2) recognition and insistence on the patient’s responsibilities within the therapy, 3) provision to the therapist of a conceptual framework for understanding and intervening, 4) use of the therapeutic relationship to engage and address suicide, 5) prioritization of suicide as a topic to be actively addressed whenever it emerges, and 6) provision of support for the therapist in the form of supervision, consultation or peer support. We discuss common factors, their formulation, and implications for development and teaching of psychotherapeutic approaches specific to suicide in patients with borderline personality disorder and note that there should be greater attention in practice and education to these issues.


American Journal of Psychiatry | 1997

The Economic Impact of Psychotherapy: A Review

Glen O. Gabbard; Susan G. Lazar; John Hornberger; David Spiegel


The journal of psychotherapy practice and research | 1997

The cost-effectiveness of psychotherapy.

Susan G. Lazar; Glen O. Gabbard


Psychodynamic psychiatry | 2014

The Cost-Effectiveness of Psychotherapy for the Major Psychiatric Diagnoses

Susan G. Lazar


Psychodynamic psychiatry | 2014

Workplace Effectiveness and Psychotherapy for Mental, Substance Abuse, and Subsyndromal Conditions

William H. Sledge; Susan G. Lazar


American Journal of Psychiatry | 1997

Disputing Psychiatry's Redefinition

Norman A. Clemens; William Bebchuk; Bernard D. Beitman; Barton J. Blinder; Glen O. Gabbard; Marcia Kraft Goin; Michael C. Hughes; Jerald Kay; Robert A. Kimmich; Susan G. Lazar; David Reiss; Eva Szigethy; Allan Tasman


Psychodynamic psychiatry | 2014

Biographical Sketch of Guest Editors

Susan G. Lazar; Frank E. Yeomans


Journal of Psychiatric Practice | 2013

Handbook of Mentalizing in Mental Health Practice

Susan G. Lazar

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Glen O. Gabbard

Baylor College of Medicine

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Jerald Kay

Wright State University

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Norman A. Clemens

Case Western Reserve University

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Allan Tasman

University of Louisville

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Beth Brodsky

Columbia University Medical Center

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David Reiss

George Washington University

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