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1 Karl Menninger School of Psychiatry and Mental Health Sciences and the Topeka Institute for Psychoanalysis, Topeka, Kansas.
When psychotherapists accused of sexual misconduct are referred for personal psychotherapy, formidable challenges are presented to the clinician designated as the psychotherapist. The author outlines common transference-countertransference themes and discusses them in terms of their psychodynamic underpinnings and optimal management. These themes include the therapist as a law enforcement agent, the therapist as a corruptible object, the therapist as a love object, the therapist as a rescuer and absolver, the therapist as an authoritarian parent, and the therapist as a voyeur. A common thread in all of these transference-counter-transference paradigms involves the discomfort experienced by the treating psychotherapists when they recognize aspects of themselves in the accused professional.
Submitted on April 26, 1994
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