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. 1985 May-Jun;58(3):255–263.

Why some patients prefer to become manic-depressive rather than schizophrenic.

H Stierlin, G Weber, G Schmidt, F Simon
PMCID: PMC2589871  PMID: 4049908

Abstract

This paper reports the authors' observations on fifteen families in which a young adult member had been diagnosed as manic-depressive. All families were seen in systemic family therapy, with intervals of four to six weeks between sessions. The circular questioning method developed by Selvini-Palazzoli [1] and her team was widely employed. All families could be described as extremely rigid and bound-up systems characterized by a "restrictive parental complementarity," typical dynamics of reciprocal delegation, and certain cognitive features and shared assumptions. These "manic-depressive" families show similarities as well as differences when compared with families with schizophrenic members (i.e., "schizo-present" families). Finally, some therapeutic implications of this view and approach are developed.

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Selected References

These references are in PubMed. This may not be the complete list of references from this article.

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