16 episodes

The new podcast for all child mental health professionals: interviews and research with world leading practitioners

MINDinMIND MINDinMIND

    • Health & Fitness

The new podcast for all child mental health professionals: interviews and research with world leading practitioners

    Infancy, Childhood & Psychotherapy: Integration & Innovation | Stephen Seligman on integrating psychoanalysis, developmental and attachment research to enrich our understanding of babies and children.

    Infancy, Childhood & Psychotherapy: Integration & Innovation | Stephen Seligman on integrating psychoanalysis, developmental and attachment research to enrich our understanding of babies and children.

    In this legacy interview, leading psychologist Clinical Professor (at the University of California and New York University) Stephen Seligman, shares his lifetime’s clinical practice and thinking as an acclaimed psychoanalyst/psychotherapist with adults, children and infants. 

    He argues that today’s research on attachment and human development changes how we should think about babies, brains, families and psychotherapy.

    Stephen discusses his extensive work with children and families, teaching and writing on childhood and his in-depth study of psychoanalytic theory and practice alongside developmental and attachment research.

    In this wide-ranging discussion with Jane O’Rourke, Stephen challenges colleagues to get out of their ‘theoretical and professional silos’ to embrace new research and ideas alongside traditional thinking so we can better serve the children and families we work with.

    He also discusses what the Relational School is in psychoanalysis and why it's a helpful approach.

    Hightlights:

    0:00 Start

    0:55 Why did Stephen Seligman become a psychotherapist?

    1:45  Importance of bringing in thinking from different areas of expertise, getting out of our ‘silos’ makes us do better work.

    3:35  Reference to Stephen Seligman’s latest book, ‘Relationships in Development’.

    3:40 The Relational School what it is - led by Stephen Mitchell

    He ‘offered a more flexible and open stance with regard to theory, contact with adjacent disciplines and clinical work’. Relational psychoanalysis encourages us to acknowledge us as humans and understand development.

    5:35 Meaning of a ‘Developmental’ approach in psychotherapy.

    It’s the capacity of individuals and systems to change over time. Children have the most growth potential, forward-moving development is important to keep in mind, along with the restrictions of the past.

    7:41 Intersubjectivity – what it is and why it’s so important in relationships and shaping who we are in every moment.

    9:24 How can relational, developmental and intersubjective approaches be helpful working with children?

    10:39 We are responsive to others’ suffering and lots of other influences. We should not be ashamed of that. Our capacity to connect and respond to others is a resource we can share with colleagues.

    11:39 Emotions and reflection lie at the heart of intersubjectivity.  Emotions are individual and social simultaneously.  

    13:20 Importance of early intervention with young children. Picture of James Heckman’s The Heckman curve – shows economic impact of investing in early childhood learning.  

    15:21 Brain development in the first few years. Early relationships are the most important predictors of developmental outcomes in later years  

    17:09 The history of Attachment Theory

    18:55 Rivalries between different schools of thinking in psychoanalysis  

    20:20 Melanie Klein’s theories can be very valuable for incorporating into thinking, especially for post-traumatic situations            

    21:16 Sometimes, though, “psychoanalysts are not always thinking about real children”.  

    23:00 The history of parent-infant psychotherapy: Working with parents and the influence of Selma Fraiberg infant-parent program  

    26:33-35:12  Case examples of parent-child psychotherapy  

    36:54 ‘Relationships in Development: Infancy, Intersubjectivity and Attachment’ by Stephen Seligman. Discusses his book

    47:27 How child psychotherapy training benefits therapeutic work with adults.   

    50:11 Relational psychoanalysis & self-disclosure.

    53:32 Crucial role and contribution of women to psychoanalysis eg Anna Freud and Melanie Klein

    • 1 hr 4 min
    What interventions best help traumatised children? Leading researcher and clinician Professor Helen MInnis

    What interventions best help traumatised children? Leading researcher and clinician Professor Helen MInnis

    Trauma can have long lasting effects on a child’s mental health and physical health. Learn more about the latest research and interventions for traumatised children in this interview with leading psychiatrist and researcher, Professor Helen Minnis.

    What interventions are most helpful for children and their families who have experienced trauma? This is a question that Helen Minnis, Professor of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry at the University of Glasgow, is seeking to answer. She has become one of the leading research Psychiatrists of her generation , working for many years therapeutically and researching children who have been abused and neglected. In this interview with Jane O’Rourke, Helen discusses what she is finding leading three research projects examining different therapeutic interventions with children and their families.

    Professor Helen Minnis was also one of the first female black psychiatrists to qualify in the UK. She tells Jane how her own life as a black woman and clinician, has shaped her research.

    We know that many fostered and adopted children come to their new families severely traumatised, and many also have problems such as ADHD and Autism.  In this interview, Jane asks Helen how fostered and adopted children can best be helped in their new placements?

    0:22 Background to Helen Minnis and her latest research 

    0:53 BeST? Services Trial, randomised controlled trial of an infant mental health intervention for children aged zero to five coming into foster care. 

    2:52 New Orleans intervention originally developed by Charley Zeanah and Julie Larrieu and the GIFT and LIFT interventions 

    4:45 Challenging the UK practice of Foster Carers being short term carers to prioritise the needs of children? Why US practice registering Foster Carers being there for the long term if the child needs. 

    6:20 Foster care commitment - a measure that was developed by Mary Dozier called the This is My Baby or This is My Child Interview 

    7:35 Partnership for Change Trial: intervening before a child goes into child protection.  8:50 Experts by Experience Shaping Services for Children 

    11:05 Neurodevelopmental conditions  ADHD, autism, tic disorders linked with child neglect and abuse  11:33 Working with Parents Without An Agenda 12:44 Parents experience of being suicidal 

    14:36 Cultivating Compassion for Parents and holding back judgement 

    17:05 Randomised Controlled Trial of Dyadic Developmental Psychotherapy developed by Dan Hughes 

    19:20 What is DDP? 

    21:35 Results of DDP trial so far 22:58 What are the Main Predictors of Successful Adoptions?  

    24:17 Adopted Children are More Emotionally Resilient than Others  

    25:10 Heritable Problems in Adopted Children 

    26:00 Traumatised Children Who Can’t Ask For Help 

    28:33 Supporting Adoptive and Foster Parents 

    29:35 Attachment Disorders affecting fostered and adopted children such as  reactive attachment disorder and disinhibited social engagement disorder 

    33'10 Why sparked Helen's interest working with children: How an Orphanage Sparked a Career With Adopted and Fostered Children  

    35:00 Professor Eric Taylor as a mentor  

    37:19 How has Helen's experiences as a black woman and clinician  informed her research? Influence of Kwame McKenzie 

    38:19 Black woman in white spaces

    • 45 min
    Jeanne Magagna | Legacy Interview | Specialist in Baby Observation & Eating Disorders in Children

    Jeanne Magagna | Legacy Interview | Specialist in Baby Observation & Eating Disorders in Children

    Legacy Interview with Dr Jeanne Magagna   

    Jeanne is a Child, Adolescent and Family Psychotherapist, who during a career spanning more than fifty years has contributed substantially to the field of child mental health.    

    Jeanne led the Psychotherapy Services at Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children in London for 24 years where she specialised in eating disorders.    

    Her latest book Psychotherapeutic Understanding of Children and Young People with Eating Disorders has just been published.  Listeners to the MINDinMIND podcast can get a 20% discount with this code: FLR40.

    In this interview with Jane O’Rourke, her psychoanalytically informed perspectives on the factors that contribute to eating disorders, and how they are best treated, will offer you fresh insights. She also insists that with the right care, no young person should ever die of an eating disorder.   Jeanne explains why the art of observing babies, a technique based on the model taught by the Tavistock Clinic which she has taught all over the world, can transform our understanding of children and their families.    

    She describes what it was like to learn the craft from the originator of infant observation, Esther Bick. Being taught by Mrs. Bick, Jeanne says was an inspiring experience though also challenging as, “Mrs. Bick was in touch with the powerful anxieties of infancy as she faced the end of her life”. Jeanne also describes how it is possible for parents to learn infant observation to deepen their understanding of their children. This led her to inspiring a very special nursery in Rome and she wrote a book with them, ‘Being Present for your Nursery Age Child’.     

    Somehow during a very busy clinical career, Jeanne has found time to write over 90 articles and books.  She says her most important book is The Silent Child: Communication without Words, in which describes her work with children who aren’t speaking, walking or eating. Of course, by their very nature, silent children are difficult to treat in talking therapies, but Jeanne’s skill in observation has made her a particularly insightful clinician and in doing so, she has helped children to have their voices heard and save their lives. 

    Jeanne’s capacity for careful observation was honed at a very early age, which is why it felt appropriate to begin this interview by asking her about her childhood and its influence on her work.

    • 1 hr 25 min
    Lydia Tischler: Child Psychotherapy pioneer and courageous innovator in child & family mental health

    Lydia Tischler: Child Psychotherapy pioneer and courageous innovator in child & family mental health

    Lydia Tischler was one of the first child psychotherapists to train with Anna Freud.  Her advocacy for children began early and in traumatic circumstances in concentration camps where she spent her teenage years caring for younger children during the Second World War.  She came to the UK as a refugee and embarked on a seventy-year career that’s been marked by courageous innovation.

    "One of the ways you can mother yourself is to mother other children", Lydia tells Jane O’Rourke in this interview. Lydia’s mother was tragically murdered in the Auschwitz concentration camp. After qualifying, Lydia became the first Child Psychotherapist at the Cassel Hospital in London where mentally ill mothers and their babies were treated.  She went on to transform their treatment by establishing a family unit, saving many seriously at-risk children from being taken into care.

    Her contribution to the teaching and organisation of child psychotherapy has also been significant.  She has been a key figure at the British Psychotherapy Foundation and Association of Child Psychotherapists but her contribution to the mental health of children internationally is also impressive. For the last thirty years as co-founder of the European Federation of Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy, she has established adult and child therapy trainings and services in Central and Eastern Europe.

    Remarkably although she is now in her 90’s, she is still supervising and teaching. Lydia began by telling Jane O’Rourke about how her early experience of loss and helping other traumatised children in the concentration camps, led her aged only 23 to begin training as a child psychotherapist with Anna Freud.



    Go to www.mindinmind.org.uk for more information about Lydia Tischler and to sign up to our email list to be notified of future podcasts

    Interview recorded 2019

    Filmed & edited  by Izzy Cooper

    Post-video Production Pawel Chichonski



    Tributes for Lydia Tischler 

    The Association of Child Psychotherapists welcomes the film on Lydia Tischler and talked to Ann Horne, ACP Consultant Child and Adolescent Psychotherapist about Lydia: 

    'From the time she arrived in the UK, age 16, in Windermere in 1945, by way of Auschwitz and Theresienstadt (Terezin), Lydia Tischler has lived a life advocating and innovating for the mental health of children and families. Trained by Anna Freud, she was the first child psychotherapist at the Cassel Hospital where, with her future husband, she established the Family Unit which admitted whole families whose functioning had completely and dangerously broken down – ‘the family as in-patient’. 

    In ‘retirement’, she was co-founder of the European Federation of Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy, ensuring that many countries of Central and Eastern Europe, in rediscovering their psychoanalytic histories, also developed child and adolescent psychoanalytic psychotherapy trainings. And she joined the organising staff group of the British Association of Psychotherapy (now IPCAPA - Independent Psychoanalytic Child & Adolescent Psychotherapy Association at the British Psychotherapy Foundation), an enabling and loved teacher, tutor and supervisor.  

    It is not surprising that she is an Honoured member of the Association of Child Psychotherapists; the profession owes her much. For the MINDinMIND viewer who is meeting her for the first time, you are fortunate! A woman of generosity and wisdom, integrity and energy, Lydia is someone we all hold near to our hearts'.

    • 51 min
    Interview with the world's oldest living child psychotherapist: 98 yrs old Isca Wittenberg

    Interview with the world's oldest living child psychotherapist: 98 yrs old Isca Wittenberg

    98 YEARS OLD ISCA WITTENBERG ON SHAPING SERVICES AND OUR THINKING ON CHILD & ADOLESCENT MENTAL HEALTH
    Go to www.mindinmind.org.uk for more information including a transcript of this interview

    When Isca Salzberger-Wittenberg was 11 years old she wrote in her diary, ‘I want to help people when I grow up.’ She is now probably the oldest living child psychotherapist and without a doubt has fulfilled her young self’s wish.

    Over the course of a career which has extended more than 70 years, Isca has had a lasting impact on mental health services for children and adolescents at the Tavistock Clinic in London. She has also helped shape the thinking of generations of child psychotherapists whom she trained. Many of the tributes that have come from her colleagues with the release of this interview are many that include the recognition of her ability to cross professional boundaries and in doing so deeply influencing the fields of education and social work. 

    Isca was one of the first people to undertake the child psychotherapy training at the Tavistock Clinic, London, set up by John Bowlby and Esther Bick after the Second World War.

    Isca’s contribution is made all the remarkable having fled Nazi Germany as a child. But perhaps surviving the trauma of the holocaust has made her a particularly good guide for others experiencing loss. In her book ‘Experiencing Endings and beginnings’, she wrote:

    ‘What makes it possible to accept the transience of life, to bear increasing losses, face the loss of one’s own life, and yet go on growing, gaining, or at least maintaining emotional and spiritual strength?’

    During this challenging time of the Covid pandemic, many of us have had to endure the death of loved ones, illness and loss of freedom.  Isca says that no matter what is happening, we must be thinking about and preparing for the loss of others and even our own demise.

    For over fifty years Isca worked at the Tavistock Clinic in London, where she eventually rose to be its Vice Chair. Her colleagues were some of the greatest names in psychotherapy such as Donald Meltzer and Neville Symington.

    Isca was in analysis with Dr Sonny Davidson for four years when he tragically died. Hear her reflections on why she decided she wanted Wilfred Bion as her analyst.

    Having taught infant observation for over 50 years, Isca explains her passion for it and why it is an essential part of understanding babies and their parents. She also reveals the challenges of working with one of the key creators of Infant Observation, Esther Bick.

    Isca discloses how her own experience growing up led her to gravitate towards helping adolescents experiencing mental health difficulties. She developed a young peoples counselling service at the Tavistock where for the first time they could refer themselves.

    Hear too why a deep interest in spirituality alongside psychoanalysis runs through Isca’s life and work and why at 98 she’s learning to play the piano!

    Remarkably, Isca is continuing in her work as a Consultant Psychoanalytic Child and Adolescent psychotherapist and Adult Psychotherapist from her home in North London.

    Interview recorded 2019 with Jane O’Rourke

    • 59 min
    Covid-19: Human Suffering And Anxiety Brings Children Possibilities For Emotional Growth. Interview Thought Piece with Neil Altman

    Covid-19: Human Suffering And Anxiety Brings Children Possibilities For Emotional Growth. Interview Thought Piece with Neil Altman

    Neil Altman believes that whilst there is great human suffering and anxiety provoked by Covid-19, it also provides an opportunity for children to grow emotionally and cognitively.
    In this hopeful and stimulating interview with Jane O'Rourke, he urges us to be brave about what we talk about with children so they can be helped to avoid the blindspots adults have over issues such as racism and inequality.
    Neil also discusses the links between psychoanalysis and the progressive education movement.

    Please go to www.mindinmind.org.uk to read Neil's written blog and see our other interviews with leading child mental health professionals

    • 24 min

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