Lecture series · Psychosomatics · Outpatient practice

Psychiatric Perspectives in Clinical Psychosomatics

Clinical Thinking in Outpatient Practice

This lecture series conveys psychosomatic concepts from a psychiatric perspective for working with somatically presented complaints in outpatient practice.

Focus

An integrative framework: biological vulnerability, biography, affect, defenses, relationships.

Practice

Structured case vignettes: differential assessment, treatment entry, complex courses.

Audience

Psychotherapy, psychiatry, and primary care medicine.

Learning objectives

Overall learning objectives
  • systematically classify psychosomatic complaints from a psychiatric perspective
  • integrate biological, biographical, and emotional factors into a structured case formulation
  • differentially assess somatically presented symptoms
  • plan treatment entry points for complex presentations
  • steer complex or chronic courses in a reflective manner
Discipline-specific focusEmphasis
PsychotherapyCase formulation and robust treatment entry points for somatically focused patients.
PsychiatryDifferential diagnostic assessment considering comorbid affective and structural disorders.
Primary care medicineStructured assessment and communication for medically unclear complaints in basic care, including psychosomatic dynamics.

Format and scope

Each module is designed for 45–60 minutes and can be booked individually or in combination. Modules are self-contained and can be assembled flexibly to fit audience and setting. Multiple modules can be combined into half-day or full-day formats. Scope and emphasis can be adapted to institutional needs.

Method

The lectures combine conceptual teaching with practice-oriented case analysis. Clinical examples from outpatient practice illustrate diagnostic and therapeutic decision-making. Depending on the setting, discussion and interactive elements are integrated.

Modules

Module 1 · Stress, symptoms, and diagnostic approach

Introduction to stress-physiology basics, typical psychosomatic constellations, and a structured diagnostic approach in outpatient practice, aiming to increase diagnostic clarity for somatically presented complaints.

Module 2 · Stress dynamics and bodily manifestation

Mechanisms through which emotional activation and stress responses can shape and perpetuate bodily symptoms, with an integrative view on affect regulation, autonomic processes, and psychosomatic expression.

Module 3 · Treatment entry and psychotherapeutic approach

Practical approaches for first contact and the early treatment phase with somatically focused patients, covering communication, working with emotional activation, and building a robust therapeutic alliance.

Module 4 · Clinical thinking in complex outpatient cases

Structured analysis of multi-layered psychosomatic courses integrating biological, biographical, and structural factors, with the aim of reflective treatment steering.