Pubdate: Jan 18, 1999 Source: International Herald-Tribune Copyright: International Herald Tribune 1999 Website: http://www.iht.com/ Contact: p9, Health / Science Feature Author: Erica Goode, New York Times Service A HUMBLER PSYCHOANALYSIS NEW YORK---Psychoanalysts, it would seem, have reason to be gloomy: These are difficult times for the couch. Once the undisputed rulers of American psychiatry, analysts now stand at the margins of a field where drug treatments and short-term talking therapies predominate. Analytic patients are in short supply: Without insurance reimbursement, even those who still desire the four or five sessions a week typical of fullfledged psychoanalysis can rarely afford to pay for them. In managed-care circles, analysis has become a synonym for treatment that costs too much and achieves too little. And the profession fares little better in the public forum, where Freud-bashing enjoys unflaggingly popularity as an intellectual sport. Yet in the psychoanalytic community these days, there is little hand-wringing and only an occasional foray into nostalgia. In a field notorious for its insularity and resistance to outside critique, the threat of extinction has inspired a frenzy of self-examination and the urge to connect with the world at large. The result is a retrofitted psychoanalysis that is humbler, more communicative, and considerably more tolerant than it has been since Freud first floated his revolutionary notions in Vienna. The rigid neo-Freudian orthodoxy that long held a lock on American psychoanalysis has gradually given way to a gentler theoretical pluralism, and, in a major sea change, analysts are no longer required to have medical degrees. In an echo of the early days of the profession, women are once again a strong presence, offering a feminist perspective on traditionally male-oriented theory. And the old figure of the silent, austere, authoritarian psychoanalyst is slowly being replaced with a new model who is just another human being and not averse to uttering a word or two. Whether such shifts will succeed in rekindling interest and replenishing the dwindling supply of patients is anyone's guess. But they represent a new determination to sdck around for the fight. This is a field that in its most vital aspects is changing, wants to change, and is trying to think about what it is and what it wants to be," said Kimberlyn Leary, associate director of the University of Michigan's Psychological Clinic and a trainee at the Michigan Psychoanalytic Institute. The presence of Ms. Leary---as a woman, a black and a psychologist rather than a medical doctor---at the annual meetings of the American Psychoanalytic Association in New York recently, in itself was proof that much has changed. Even a decade ago, the yearly gatherings of the association, which was foundedin 1911 by American followers of Freud and remains the dominant psychoanalytic organization in the United States, were populated by gray-haired men in dark suits, the atmosphere one of sober formality. Discussions focused narrowly on technique and practice, with little acknowledgment of events in the outside world. In contrast, the attendance roster at the recent meetings included many younger analysts, a large group of women and at least a few minorities. Panels addressed issues like race, adoption, homophobia and sexual abuse. Analysts spoke of their work in atypical settings: with baseball teams, in nursery schools, with police departments trying to combat community violence. And different theoretical perspectives---including the British school of object relations, Heinz Kohut's self-psychology and Lacanian analysis---were listed in the program. Yet perhaps the most striking difference was in how the analysts at the meetings talked about their interactions with patients. "The degree of certainty in the way we talk has changed, " said Marvin Margolis, a former president of the association. "We're a little more modest, more hypothetical about our interventions and how we frame them." Where once the analyst was seen as an authority who took charge of treating the patient's pathology, most analysts now describe the analyst-patient relationship as a collaborative endeavor, the patient a full partner. Many practitioners have abandoned the notion that the analyst should be an entirely blank screen, revealing no emotions or personal details. And while most analysts embrace the fundamentals of Freud's "talking cure" ---the power of unconscious images and fantasies to influence behavior, the importance of chilhood experiences in shaping development and the central role of transference, or the replaying of early patterns of relating to others within the analytic treatment---few adhere inflexibly to a unified theory. Instead, they practice a kind of utilitarian eclecticism, drawing upon different psychoanalytic schools as needed in the treatment of individual patients. In any field, a transformation of this magnitude does not take place overnight, and the changes in Freud's "impossible profession" began long before the managed care revolution. In the 1960s, psychoanalysis, ascendant in psychiatry departments across the country, was hugely successful --- and enormously over confident. "We had a monopoly," said Arnold Richards, a New York analyst who is editor of the Journal of the American Psychoanalytic Association. But bythe 1980s therewere increasing signs of malaise. In academic departments, psychoanalysts were rapidly losing ground to psychiatrists with a more biological approach to mental illness. In the public arena, interest in Freud's legacy was declining. Growth of the psychoanalytic association, which now has 3,200 members about a third of the psychoanalysts in the United States, came to a standstill, while the average age of members rose. One antidote to these complaints, many believed, would be an injection of new blood, and it came in 1988, when in response to a restraint of trade suit by psychologists, a settlement overturned the psychoanalytic association's longstanding policy of restricting analytic training to candidates with medical degrees, opening the field to lay analysts. Yet perhaps the biggest transformation in the way psychoanalysis views itself and its place in the world came with the arrival of new leaders, armed with a sense of urgency about the plight of psychoanalysis and a determination to do something about it. ROBERT PYLES, president of the psychoanalytic association, is one example. Unlike his predecessors of a few decades ago, who prided themselves on a scholarly detachment and made no attempt to promote their profession's image, Mr. Pyles is a political activist. He has broken down traditional barriers, reaching out to other mental health organizations like the American Psychiatric Association, and calling for "a new vision of ourselves as psychoanalysts of the 21st century." And with other leading psychoanalysts he is shepherding a variety of projects designed to increase public knowledge and broaden the field's influence. "Ever since I was in training, this attitude of psychoanalysis having to exist in some isolated hothouse has driven me nuts," Mr. Pyles said recently. "I think it damn near killed us." - --- MAP posted-by: derek rea