Abstract
This paper identifies ways in which a short-term inpatient group can support psychological growth of women. A four-stage developmental model of women's work in an inpatient group is described. In each stage, women achieve greater comfort in new modes of relating. Women also gain greater appreciation of their interpersonal strengths. In the first stage, women face issues related to autonomy and connection. In the second stage, women focus upon conflictual feelings in relation to authority. In the third stage, women address obstacles to the achievement of satisfying, intimate, peer-based relationships. In the fourth stage, women focus upon the issues of separation and loss that are precipitated by the termination of the group. At each stage, the developmental tasks women perform are contrasted with related but nonidentical tasks performed by men.
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The author wishes to thank Drs. Joan Cooper and Francine Deutsch for their comments on an earlier draft of this paper.
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Brabender, V. The psychological growth of women in a short-term inpatient group. Group 16, 131–145 (1992). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02078881
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02078881