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The Case of Long-term Treatments: How They Unfold & Whether to End Them

The Case of Long-term Treatments: How They Unfold & Whether to End Them

Presented by Andrew Smolar, MD

  • September 6, 2025

  • Location: In Person & Virtual

  • Source/ Event Link: Psychoanalytic Center of Philadelphia

    “In this presentation, the author, Andrew Smolar, MD, considers long-term psychodynamic treatments: How do they develop? In what circumstances are they an outgrowth of treatments that should have ended? When is it beneficial for the patient to continue working with the same therapist for a long period of time? And what are indications for return to therapy during the lifecycle? The author reviews pertinent literature on termination, stalemates, and effectiveness of long-term treatments. He describes the therapist confronting five clinical situations that raise questions about how and whether to end treatment. He concludes with several guiding principles: (1) paying attention to treatment goals and certain transferences prevents impasses; (2) self-analytic capacity is necessary but not sufficient for readiness to end; and (3) the patient’s forming an intimate primary relationship with a person other than the therapist facilitates ending.”

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August 23

How Do We Know What We Know? Considering Knowledge, Power, and the Self in the Practice of Psychodynamic Psychotherapy

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September 17

The Psychoanalytic Clinical Encounter, the Political, and the Production of Difference