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Private Akutklinik · Bad Herrenalb Mo–Fr 8:00–16:30 Uhr · Kontaktaufnahme rund um die Uhr

The Course of Treatment.

Three phases structure the inpatient stay: arrival, diagnostics and stabilisation, in-depth psychotherapeutic treatment, and preparation for return to everyday home and working life — closely coordinated with referring physicians and therapists.

3 Treatment Phases · Individual Therapy Plan · Planned Aftercare

Arrive, understand, stabilise.

In the first phase of inpatient treatment, the patient's symptoms, external life circumstances and problems, as well as their medical history, are documented. The psychiatric diagnostic assessment is complemented by a comprehensive medical admission examination.

The goals of treatment and expectations of therapy are discussed with the respective primary therapist, so that an indication-specific, individual therapy plan can be developed collaboratively and implemented in the concrete weekly and daily schedule.

In the first therapy phase, with distance from the home and work environment, the focus is on stabilising the patient — who is often under significant inner distress — on establishing a therapeutic working alliance, on understanding the individual therapy plan, and on becoming familiar with the various therapy offerings. Transparency, psychoeducation and a solid therapeutic relationship play a decisive role in acceptance of the condition, treatment motivation and willingness to engage with the therapy offerings indicated from a medical and therapeutic perspective. A model of the respective illness aetiology can be developed in order to recognise and understand triggering, maintaining or predisposing factors of one's own clinical presentation.

In line with the severity of the presenting symptoms and the previous course of illness, each patient is also informed about pharmacological treatment options or any existing need for psychopharmacological therapy.

Recognise patterns, change.

In the in-depth treatment phase, we offer intensive psychotherapeutic work. Adapted to the respective clinical presentation, this work is conducted across modalities. Cognitive-behavioural interventions create, for some clinical presentations, the very precondition for possible symptom relief and a changed future approach to symptoms (e.g. in anxiety disorders, obsessive-compulsive disorders, self-regulation difficulties in the context of personality disorders). In the further course, we also focus psychodynamic (depth-psychological) and systemic therapeutic approaches on an understanding of one's own clinical picture not only against the background of external stressors (stress, occupational overload, personal conflicts, losses and more), but also in the context of one's own relational and behavioural patterns (e.g. avoidance of conflict, limited ability to set boundaries, excessive achievement motivation in the pursuit of recognition, overvalued need for control, difficulties in emotion regulation and others), inner conflicts and their biographical roots. Within this framework, a personality diagnostic assessment is also conducted. In this way, one's own contribution to conflicted relationships (professional and personal) can be worked through, placed in context with one's own symptoms, and changes become possible. This is of particular importance with regard to future relapse prevention.

In contrast to the in-depth psychotherapeutic treatment described above, patients with severe psychiatric conditions receive a lower-threshold, supportive, psychoeducative psychotherapy, which focuses on acceptance of the condition and coping with the illness, awareness of personal stress tolerance limits, recognition of early warning symptoms and future structuring of daily routines, and where appropriate addresses socio-psychiatric questions (vocational stress testing, supported housing arrangements, outpatient care networks, etc.).

Well prepared to return to everyday life.

In the concluding treatment phase, the primary focus is on stability in preparation for the patient's return to everyday home and working life. Initial trial periods in the home environment take place. Difficulties in applying what has been learned in therapy (managing symptoms, shaping relationships and conflicts, and much more) can be worked through in detail. Strategies for possible crisis management, individual relapse prevention and, where necessary, crisis intervention are discussed, and outpatient psychiatric-psychotherapeutic follow-up care is initiated. Each patient's professional perspective is also addressed, and where needed, a measure for vocational reintegration is planned.

Of particular importance to us is contact with the referring physicians and therapists. Accordingly, we maintain close communication with outpatient colleagues regarding the inpatient course of treatment at our clinic and the subsequent psychiatric or, where applicable, psychotherapeutic aftercare. Where required, we also network with further support systems, such as legal guardians, community mental health services, supported housing facilities, day centres of Diakonie or Caritas, and others.

Admission

Speak with us — personally, in confidence, without delay.

Phone · Admissions Office
+49 7083 748-0
Admission
Privately insured · Beihilfe · Self-payers

Patients insured with certain statutory health insurance funds (e.g. Techniker Krankenkasse and DAK) may in some cases be able to obtain partial reimbursement from their insurer.