Christian Peter Dogs

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Christian Peter Dogs (born February 5, 1953 in Goslar ) is a German physician, psychotherapist and author. As chief physician and director, he headed the Panorama Clinic for Psychosomatic Medicine , Psychotherapy , Naturopathic Treatment and Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) in Scheidegg ( Allgäu ) for more than 20 years .

Life

Dogs - the third son of the doctor Wilfried Dogs, who had founded a sanatorium for psychosomatic medicine in the Harz Mountains in 1950 - experienced a violent and severely traumatic childhood and was sent to a reformatory at the age of ten. After finishing school, Dogs trained as a masseur and medical lifeguard . He then worked for several years as a tennis trainer and animator . From 1979 to 1985 Dogs studied human medicine in Homburg at the Medical Faculty of Saarland University . His doctorate as Dr. med. took place in 1986. Since 1994 he has been a specialist in psychiatry and psychotherapy as well as a specialist in psychosomatic medicine and psychotherapy .

Since July 1, 1994 Christian Peter Dogs - together with the managing owners Erwin and Gisela Obenaus - was involved in the establishment and operation of the Panorama Clinic for Psychosomatic Medicine, Psychotherapy, Naturopathic Treatment and Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) in Scheidegg. There he worked as chief physician and then as medical director . He ended this position on October 31, 2016.

From 2001 to 2009 Dogs had a teaching position for inpatient psychosomatics at the University of Ulm . He was also active as scientific director in the following institutions in these subjects:

  • 1992–1994: Medical courses for naturopathic treatment at the Sebastian Kneipp Academy in Bad Wörishofen
  • 1991–1994: Courses in health education at the Sebastian Kneipp Academy in Bad Wörishofen
  • 1994–1996: Teaching Board for Naturopathic Treatment Bad Griesbach
  • 1996–2015: Allgäuer Psychosomatic Working Group in Scheidegg with the implementation of medical courses for basic psychosomatic care

Christian Peter Dogs is a teaching therapist and supervisor recognized by the Bavarian State Medical Association for deep psychological individual and group therapy, Balint groups and autogenic training .

Since April 2017, Dogs has been the medical director of the psychosomatic clinic at the Max Grundig Clinic Bühlerhöhe . This clinic was founded in 1986 by the entrepreneur Max Grundig . In October 2018, Dogs also said goodbye to this role and retired.

concept

In his therapeutic concept, Christian Peter Dogs orients himself on the findings of the psychotherapy researcher Klaus Grawe and on the therapeutic work of the American psychoanalyst Irvin D. Yalom . Dogs developed its own therapy concept for the Panorama Fachklinik with a free choice of therapist, short length of stay and resource-oriented psychotherapy. In 2001, Dogs ran - together with the Research Center for Psychotherapy in Heidelberg - the development of post-inpatient internet support with chat and email for the patients of the Panorama Clinic. Pre-inpatient care has been online since 2013.

Together with the management of the Panorama Fachklinik and in cooperation with the Techniker Krankenkasse and later also with the German Salaried Health Insurance Fund , Dogs developed a billing model based on case-based flat rates .

See also

Publications

  • Christian Peter Dogs, Wolf-Jürgen Maurer: Naturopathic Treatment and Psychosomatic Medicine. Solution-oriented practice. Hippokratis Verlag, Stuttgart 1998, ISBN 3-7773-1298-3 .
  • Christian Peter Dogs: Basics of Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics. Haug Verlag, Stuttgart 1999, ISBN 978-3-7760-1354-2 .
  • Christian Peter Dogs, Nina Poelchau : Feelings are not a disease: why we need them and how they make us satisfied. Ullstein, Berlin 2017, ISBN 978-3-550-08195-8 .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b CV of Dr. Christian Peter Dogs . In: Dr. Christian Dogs . ( archive.org [accessed January 28, 2018]).
  2. Christian Peter Dogs, Nina Poelchau: Feelings are not a disease, why we need them and how they make us satisfied . Ullstein, Berlin 2017, ISBN 3-550-08195-2 , pp. 59 .
  3. Anika Geisler: The search for happiness as a wrong path: "We'll find a way out" - psychiatrist Christian Peter Dogs had a horrible childhood - and made it to the head physician. A conversation about good therapists, the power of emotions and his aversion to psychoanalysis. Stern 37/2017, from September 7, 2017.
  4. Nina Poelchau: Ways out of depression: The unusual methods of the Christian Peter Dog. Stern, September 25, 2016 (archive) .
  5. Nina Poelchau: Feelings are not a disease, why we need them and how they make us satisfied . Ullstein, Berlin 2017, ISBN 3-550-08195-2 , pp. 162 .
  6. Bettina Weiguny: Don't run to the therapist right away!” - How sick are Germans? In any case, less sick than therapists would tell them to. A conversation with the psychiatrist Christian Dogs… , Frankfurter Allgemeine, on December 15, 2017 ( archive ).
  7. Juliane Junghans: “What does it help me to know why I am disturbed?”, Interview with Christian Peter Dogs , In: resonanzboden - The Ullstein Book Publishing Blog, from September 1, 2017 ( archive ).
  8. ^ APA Allgäuer Psychosomatic Working Group. Retrieved January 28, 2018 .
  9. Christian Peter Dogs, Nina Poelchau: Feelings are not a disease, why we need them and how they make us satisfied . Ullstein, Berlin 2017, ISBN 3-550-08195-2 , pp. 159 .
  10. H. Kordy, V. Golkaramnay, M. Wolf, S. Haug, S. Bauer: Internet chat groups in psychotherapy and psychosomatics . In: Psychotherapist . tape 51 , no. 2 , March 1, 2006, ISSN  0935-6185 , p. 144–153 , doi : 10.1007 / s00278-005-0458-6 ( springer.com [accessed January 28, 2018]).
  11. Christian Peter Dogs, Nina Poelchau: Feelings are not a disease, why we need them and how they make us satisfied . Ullstein, Berlin 2017, ISBN 3-550-08195-2 , pp. 133-155 .
  12. Don't run to the therapist right away. Conversation between Christian Peter Dogs and Bettina Weiguny. In: Frankfurter Allgemeine Sonntagszeitung, No. 49 of December 10, 2017, p. 28.