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IIGP

Institute for Individual and Group Psychotherapy

Institute for Individual and Group Psychotherapy
29600 Northwestern Hwy, Ste 100A
Southfield, MI 48034
(248) 353-5333

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    • Student Experience 1
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  • Faculty
    • David Baker, M.S.W
    • Leora Bar-Levav, M.D.
    • Natan HarPaz, Ph.D, M.S.W, CGP, FAGPA
    • Ronald Hook, M.S.W.
    • Paul Shultz, M.S.W.
    • Marcia Stein, M.S.W.
    • Pamela Torraco, M.S.W.
    • Adjunct Faculty
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Creating Lasting Change

Keys to Effective Therapy

Fortunately, effective psychotherapy can provide more than symptom relief. Psychotherapy with a well-trained therapist offers life-long relief for anxiety and depression. It can help people to change their attitudes, their self-defeating behaviors and their relationships. Effective therapy helps people to live more content, productive and satisfying lives. And when parents recover from depression, the prospects for their children improve dramatically as well.

20160126_121528So why isn’t psychotherapy more widely used? Two reasons. First, physicians and patients occasionally find immediate symptom relief with medication. For some, they believe that this short-term relief is as good as it gets. They may not recognize that a lasting solution is even available. Second, few graduate programs in psychiatry, social work or psychology provide in-depth training in psychotherapy. The emphasis is on evidence-based, short-term intervention. The result? Too few clinicians know how to treat anxiety and depression, and many patients get inadequate treatment.

Taking on the Challenge

Over the last 30 years, the Institute for individual and Group Psychotherapy faculty has refined a highly effective approach to psychotherapy that combines group and one-to-one sessions. This method is powerful. When practiced by skilled clinicians, it can significantly reduce emotional and physical symptoms. The results are routinely positive, often dramatic and occasionally life-saving. The changes are usually long-lasting without the side effects of medication.

The key to effective psychotherapy is the therapist. Who the therapist is as a person- not only what he or she knows – is of utmost importance. He or she is the instrument that largely determines the outcome of therapy. In order to develop effective therapists, our training must be intense. Typically, Fellows participate in 3-7 years of “on-the-job” training under the direct observation of experienced mentors. The Institute for Individual and Group Psychotherapy is the only program that provides such a demanding “apprenticeship” over this length of time. Is it really worth all this effort? We see positive results in changed lives every day.

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Workshops

Culture and Race in Psychotherapy

Formative Psychology

An Overview of Emotion-Focused Therapy: An Evidence Based Approach to Treatment

Adoption: Implications for Psychotherapy

Yoga and Psychotherapy

Recent Blog Posts

CHOOSING A PSYCHOTHERAPIST BY HOW MUCH IT COSTS?

Group Therapy vs. Individual Therapy

‘DAMAGE’ That a Psychotherapist Treats

The Central Place of the “Body” in Psychotherapy

Thinking and Feeling

Newsletter Archive

  • Winter 2012
  • Spring 2012
  • Winter 2009, Vol. 2 Issue 2
  • Winter 2008, Vol. 1, Issue 2
  • Spring 2008, Vol. 1, Issue 3
  • Spring 2009, Vol. 2, Issue 3
  • Spring 2011 Vol. 4, Issue 2
  • Summer 2014
  • Fall 2009, Vol. 3 Issue 1
  • Fall 2007, Vol. 1, Issue 1

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