Logotherapy

Logotherapy, also called long-term psychotherapy or eclectic psychotherapy, is an integrative form of psychotherapy used to treat psychopathology. Logotherapy combines many approaches, such as individual, interpersonal, social psychotherapy, biological psychotherapy and others, to comprehensively help clients solve their problems. While cognitive therapy focuses on resolving symptoms and specific dispositional thoughts, logotherapy addresses people's more general and philosophical beliefs in relation to individual and social problems. The logotherapist views health as a consequence of understanding, realizing values ​​and managing meaning in life. Logotherapists use the philosophical principles of existentialism, Gestalt psychology, and other schools of thought to help clients recognize obstacles to understanding their own lives and solving personal and professional problems. The logotherapeutic approach seeks to combine the efforts of external agents, including therapists, and the needs of clients to find self-realization and solve problems.