Abstract
Setting up analytic psychotherapy groups on secure forensic wards is a complicated and arduous process. Once established, clinical work is even more difficult because emotional contact with forensic patients places extreme pressure on the countertransference. We review aspects of the psychoanalytic theory of countertransference related to increasingly serious levels of psychopathology in order to clarify why this should be so. Examples of clinical group analysis and work with forensic staff illustrate our experiences on the countertransference edge.
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