Jon G. Allen, Ph.D., holds the position of Clinical Professor as a member of the Voluntary Faculty in the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences at the Baylor College of Medicine. He is a member of the honorary faculty at the Houston Center for Psychoanalytic Studies and the adjunct faculty of the Institute for Spirituality and Health at the Texas Medical Center. He sought postdoctoral training at the psychoanalytically oriented Menninger Clinic, where he taught and supervised fellows and residents; conducted psychotherapy, diagnostic consultations, and led research on clinical outcomes. He and his colleagues developed an intensive inpatient treatment program for trauma, in which he created what became a hospital-wide psychoeducational program on recovering from trauma. Having retired from clinical practice after 40 years at the clinic, he continues to teach, write, and consult with psychotherapists. His books include Trusting in Psychotherapy, Restoring Mentalizing in Attachment Relationships: Treating Trauma with Plain Old Therapy; Mentalizing in Clinical Practice (with Peter Fonagy and Anthony Bateman); Coping with Trauma: From Self-Understanding to Hope; and Coping with Depression: From Catch-22 to Hope, all published by American Psychiatric Association Publishing. Additional books are Mentalizing in the Development and Treatment of Attachment Trauma (Karnac/Routledge) and Traumatic Relationships and Serious Mental Disorders (Wiley).
REFERENCES
1) Allen, J.G. (2016). Should the century-old practice of psychotherapy defer to science and ignore its foundations in two millennia of ethical thought? Bulletin of the Menninger Clinic, 80, 1-29.
2) Benjamin, J. (2018). Beyond doer done To: Recognition theory, intersubjectivity, and the third. New York: Routledge.
3) Delboy, S. & Michaels, L. (2021). Going beneath the surface: What people want from therapy. Psychoanalytic Inquiry, 41, 603-623.
4) Goodman, D.M. & Severson, E.R., Eds. (2016). The ethical turn: Otherness and subjectivity in contemporary psychoanalysis. New York: Routledge.
5) Held, V. (2006). The ethics of care. New York: Oxford University Press.
IMAGE of heart hands from Can Stock.