Aija de Starceva-Apele

Aija de Starceva-Apele

Psychoanalyst
M.Psych.(Clin), M.A.Psych. (Soc., Ed.), M.Soc. (PubAdm)

Areas of work Psychoanalysis
Psychoanalytical psychotherapy
Group psychotherapy
Supervision
Working languages Latvian, Russian, English
Contact information +371 28620444
aija.apele@gmail.com
A.Čaka 28a-600, Riga
Education

 

2012-2018 Training in psychoanalysis, Estonian-Latvian Psychoanalytical Society, qualification-psychoanalyst
2010-2012 Training in psychoanalysis, Hann Grohen-Prakken East European Psychoanalytical institute
2005-2010 Training in Psychodynamic Group Psychotherapy, Riga Stradins University
2015- Present PhD Student in Clinical Psychology, University of Latvia
Master’s degrees

 

Master’s Degree in Clinical Psychology (University of Latvia), Master’s Degree in Psychology of Excellence (Ludwig Maximilian University, Germany), Master’s Degree in Public Administration (University of Latvia)
Additional professional education Crisis intervention, crisis centre “Skalbes”
Work experience

 

2005 – Present Private practice
Before Psychological counselling, group psychotherapy and other group work (support groups, educational groups) in different social institutions; lecturer and supervisor
Publications in psychology de Starceva-Apele, A., & Rascevska, M. (2022). Reliability and factorial validity of long and brief versions of the inventory of personality organization in a Latvian sample. Research in Psychotherapy: Psychopathology, Process and Outcome, 25(2), 159-172. https://doi.org/10.4081/ripppo.2022.606

Apele A., Bite I. The relationship between emotional and behavioral problems, employability, and status of employment, Baltic Journal of Psychology, 2016 https://dspace.lu.lv/dspace/bitstream/handle/7/37237/Baltics_Psychology_Journal_2015.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y

Personal touch I like two quotes. One – from this century, the other from the beginnings of psychoanalysis. First – “Psychoanalysis make people understand, who they are, and how they function in this world” (Vittorio Gallese, neuroscientist). The second – “Until you make the unconscious conscious, it will direct your life and you will call it fate” (Carl Gustav Jung, Freud’s disciple, later the opponent).
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