This article discusses the 30th anniversary of a psychotherapy magazine and reflects on efforts over the past 30 years to quantify and measure the effectiveness of psychotherapy. It describes how Hans Eysenck challenged the field in 1952 by claiming there was no proof psychotherapy worked. This sparked the modern quest to establish psychotherapy's scientific legitimacy through randomized controlled trials. While cognitive therapy pioneer Aaron Beck began testing his approach in the 1970s, randomized controlled trials did not become a driving force until 1993 when the APA established a task force to identify empirically supported treatments. The article suggests that establishing evidence-based therapies through randomized controlled trials has been important for accountability, third-party reimbursement, and determining the allocation of time and resources.
The document discusses thought reform and totalitarianism in the context of the LDS Church's missionary training program. It summarizes Scott D. Miller's analysis comparing the eight themes of thought reform identified by Robert J. Lifton to techniques used in the Missionary Training Center (MTC). These include milieu control through rigid schedules and regulations on what missionaries can see, hear, read, etc. It also discusses mystical manipulation by provoking specific behaviors and emotions to validate LDS ideology. The document raises ethical questions about thought reform in the MTC and missionary environment.
When mental health practitioners use methods that are totally lacking in scientific support, particularly when the treatment has been demonstrated to be harmful and evidence-based alternatives are available, they should be liable for malpractice. Organizations like the American Psychological Association claim to support scientific standards but leave loopholes that allow psychologists to practice pseudoscientific nonsense. Several steps must be taken to close the gap between science and practice in mental healthcare, including malpractice reform, improved guidelines based on evidence, consumer education, and a commitment to scientific practice by professional organizations.
Athena Software has partnered with the International Center for Clinical Excellence to integrate Dr. Scott Miller’s Feedback Informed Treatment (FIT) / Partners for Change Outcome Management System (PCOMS) into Penelope Case Management software. This allows clients to provide feedback on their wellbeing and session satisfaction through intuitive data input sliders, which is then contrasted against a large dataset to evaluate treatment effectiveness and presented in reports. Penelope Case Management Software is used by social services in 15 countries for case management, clinical notes, scheduling, and outcomes evaluation.
The document discusses thought reform and totalitarianism in the context of the LDS Church's missionary training program. It summarizes Scott D. Miller's analysis comparing the eight themes of thought reform identified by Robert J. Lifton to techniques used in the Missionary Training Center (MTC). These include milieu control through rigid schedules and regulations on what missionaries can see, hear, read, etc. It also discusses mystical manipulation by provoking specific behaviors and emotions to validate LDS ideology. The document raises ethical questions about thought reform in the MTC and missionary environment.
When mental health practitioners use methods that are totally lacking in scientific support, particularly when the treatment has been demonstrated to be harmful and evidence-based alternatives are available, they should be liable for malpractice. Organizations like the American Psychological Association claim to support scientific standards but leave loopholes that allow psychologists to practice pseudoscientific nonsense. Several steps must be taken to close the gap between science and practice in mental healthcare, including malpractice reform, improved guidelines based on evidence, consumer education, and a commitment to scientific practice by professional organizations.
Athena Software has partnered with the International Center for Clinical Excellence to integrate Dr. Scott Miller’s Feedback Informed Treatment (FIT) / Partners for Change Outcome Management System (PCOMS) into Penelope Case Management software. This allows clients to provide feedback on their wellbeing and session satisfaction through intuitive data input sliders, which is then contrasted against a large dataset to evaluate treatment effectiveness and presented in reports. Penelope Case Management Software is used by social services in 15 countries for case management, clinical notes, scheduling, and outcomes evaluation.
Article in Division 29's journal, psychotherapy that reviews the research on routine outcome monitoring, arguing that current efforts are at risk for repeating the history of failed efforts to improve the outcome of psychotherapy.
Measures and feedback 2013 [compatibility mode]Scott Miller
1) Numerous studies have examined the psychometric properties of the ORS and SRS, finding high levels of reliability and validity. The ORS and SRS demonstrate good internal consistency, test-retest reliability, and validity evidenced by correlations with other measures of distress and functioning.
2) RCTs on routine outcome monitoring and feedback have found that providing therapists feedback on patient progress leads to better outcomes for clients identified as "at risk" of deterioration. These clients have higher rates of reliable improvement, longer treatment duration, and are less likely to deteriorate when therapists receive feedback.
This document discusses research comparing cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) and relaxation therapy for treating panic disorder (PD) and generalized anxiety disorder (GAD). The research found that CBT outperformed relaxation therapy for PD in reducing primary symptoms, with a moderate effect size, but the treatments did not differ for secondary outcomes like depression. For GAD, the effects of the treatments did not significantly differ. The discussion critiques previous research supporting the "Dodo Bird verdict" that all psychotherapies are equally effective, noting limitations like aggregating various treatments, disorders and outcome measures.
Expanding the Lens of EBP: A Common Factors in AgreementScott Miller
The authors explore the limitations of the traditional view of evidence-based practice with its emphasis on specific methods and diagnosis. An alternative is proposed based on the common factors.
Individual expertise versus domain expertise (2014)Scott Miller
This document discusses the effectiveness of evidence-based practices (EBPs) for veterans with mental illness. It states that EBPs have led to unprecedented improvements for some veterans, not achieved in decades of prior treatment. However, more work needs to be done to refine EBPs and promote their wider use in clinical settings. Veterans and others with mental illness deserve the most effective care available now and in the future.
The document discusses the interplay between a therapist's personal characteristics and qualities (therapist variables) and a client's theory of change. It argues that the most effective therapy occurs when the therapist is aware of how their variables may influence the therapeutic alliance and adapts their approach to align with the client's theory of change. Case studies are presented to illustrate therapists monitoring client feedback to improve outcomes. Effective therapists recognize when their approach does not match a client's needs and make adjustments to better facilitate the client's process of change.
This study examined whether psychotherapists' outcomes improve over time and with increased experience. The researchers analyzed data from over 6,500 patients seen by 170 psychotherapists over an average of 4.73 years. Using multilevel modeling, they found that while therapists' outcomes were generally comparable to clinical trials, there was a very small but statistically significant tendency for patient outcomes to diminish as therapists gained more experience in terms of both time and number of patients seen. However, therapists showed lower rates of early termination as their experience increased. The results suggest that while experience may not necessarily lead to better patient outcomes, it can reduce dropout rates.
Utilizing the ORS in a Community Mental Health Clinic (student outcomes etc) ...Scott Miller
Outcomes of students and professionals were compared. Study found students equally effective or better than experienced therapists when students used the measures. Students who used the measures faithfully to guide practice had significantly better outcomes
Training of Therapists (Evolution Conference 2013)Scott Miller
The document discusses the training and career development of psychotherapists. It notes that traditional professional training programs like MS, MSW, PsyD, and PhD programs take 2-3 to 5-7 years to complete. Starting salaries for psychotherapists range from $34-55k and increase with experience. Research shows little evidence that traditional training leads to better client outcomes and that factors like supervision, experience, and continuing education are more important. The best therapists spend 4-8 hours per week practicing and improving their skills through deliberate practice. An apprenticeship model with structures for continuous learning and improvement may help therapists develop expertise.
This document summarizes and critiques common myths about antidepressant medications. It discusses how popular culture and marketing have promoted the idea that depression is solely a biological condition cured by medication, rather than a complex issue influenced by various life experiences. However, the document asserts that research does not actually support the view that antidepressants are dramatically more effective than placebo pills or psychotherapy. It claims antidepressants have been exaggerated as "miracle drugs" due more to profit-driven marketing than objective science.
North & south counselling outcomes article march 2013Scott Miller
The document discusses the benefits of exercise for mental health. Regular physical activity can help reduce anxiety and depression and improve mood and cognitive function. Exercise causes chemical changes in the brain that may help protect against mental illness and improve symptoms for those who already suffer from conditions like anxiety and depression.
Snatching Victory From The Jaws Of Defeat (Handouts)Scott Miller
This document discusses improving the effectiveness of psychotherapy, especially for challenging cases. It provides both good and bad news about therapy outcomes. On average, treated clients do better than 80% of untreated clients. However, dropout rates are around 47% and some therapists fail to identify clients who are not progressing. The document recommends formalizing client feedback through measures of outcome and alliance administered at each session. Integrating this feedback into care through collaborative teams can help therapists "fail successfully" by changing course when needed to improve outcomes.
American journal of psychotherapy 2013 vol 67 pp 23 -46 (2) by paul clementScott Miller
This summarizes a study that analyzed outcome data from 1,599 psychotherapy patients seen by a private practitioner over 45 years. It found that 65.15% of patients were rated as improved or much improved after treatment, with a mean pre-/post-treatment effect size of 1.90. Patients and their parents rated outcomes more positively than the therapist. There was a positive relationship between length of treatment and better outcomes.
Marketing & Happiness: Through the Looking Glass of Positive PsychologyDavid Van Nuys
The document discusses how the field of positive psychology can provide a framework for qualitative market researchers. Positive psychology focuses on human strengths and happiness, moving away from merely studying pathology. It describes three types of happiness and explains that deeper, long-lasting forms of happiness come from relationships and virtues rather than money or possessions. Positive psychology research shows that happiness benefits health and longevity. The implications are that market researchers should listen for what sustains consumers' hope and joy in difficult times, and help clients address higher-level needs around sustainability and well-being.
Article in Division 29's journal, psychotherapy that reviews the research on routine outcome monitoring, arguing that current efforts are at risk for repeating the history of failed efforts to improve the outcome of psychotherapy.
Measures and feedback 2013 [compatibility mode]Scott Miller
1) Numerous studies have examined the psychometric properties of the ORS and SRS, finding high levels of reliability and validity. The ORS and SRS demonstrate good internal consistency, test-retest reliability, and validity evidenced by correlations with other measures of distress and functioning.
2) RCTs on routine outcome monitoring and feedback have found that providing therapists feedback on patient progress leads to better outcomes for clients identified as "at risk" of deterioration. These clients have higher rates of reliable improvement, longer treatment duration, and are less likely to deteriorate when therapists receive feedback.
This document discusses research comparing cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) and relaxation therapy for treating panic disorder (PD) and generalized anxiety disorder (GAD). The research found that CBT outperformed relaxation therapy for PD in reducing primary symptoms, with a moderate effect size, but the treatments did not differ for secondary outcomes like depression. For GAD, the effects of the treatments did not significantly differ. The discussion critiques previous research supporting the "Dodo Bird verdict" that all psychotherapies are equally effective, noting limitations like aggregating various treatments, disorders and outcome measures.
Expanding the Lens of EBP: A Common Factors in AgreementScott Miller
The authors explore the limitations of the traditional view of evidence-based practice with its emphasis on specific methods and diagnosis. An alternative is proposed based on the common factors.
Individual expertise versus domain expertise (2014)Scott Miller
This document discusses the effectiveness of evidence-based practices (EBPs) for veterans with mental illness. It states that EBPs have led to unprecedented improvements for some veterans, not achieved in decades of prior treatment. However, more work needs to be done to refine EBPs and promote their wider use in clinical settings. Veterans and others with mental illness deserve the most effective care available now and in the future.
The document discusses the interplay between a therapist's personal characteristics and qualities (therapist variables) and a client's theory of change. It argues that the most effective therapy occurs when the therapist is aware of how their variables may influence the therapeutic alliance and adapts their approach to align with the client's theory of change. Case studies are presented to illustrate therapists monitoring client feedback to improve outcomes. Effective therapists recognize when their approach does not match a client's needs and make adjustments to better facilitate the client's process of change.
This study examined whether psychotherapists' outcomes improve over time and with increased experience. The researchers analyzed data from over 6,500 patients seen by 170 psychotherapists over an average of 4.73 years. Using multilevel modeling, they found that while therapists' outcomes were generally comparable to clinical trials, there was a very small but statistically significant tendency for patient outcomes to diminish as therapists gained more experience in terms of both time and number of patients seen. However, therapists showed lower rates of early termination as their experience increased. The results suggest that while experience may not necessarily lead to better patient outcomes, it can reduce dropout rates.
Utilizing the ORS in a Community Mental Health Clinic (student outcomes etc) ...Scott Miller
Outcomes of students and professionals were compared. Study found students equally effective or better than experienced therapists when students used the measures. Students who used the measures faithfully to guide practice had significantly better outcomes
Training of Therapists (Evolution Conference 2013)Scott Miller
The document discusses the training and career development of psychotherapists. It notes that traditional professional training programs like MS, MSW, PsyD, and PhD programs take 2-3 to 5-7 years to complete. Starting salaries for psychotherapists range from $34-55k and increase with experience. Research shows little evidence that traditional training leads to better client outcomes and that factors like supervision, experience, and continuing education are more important. The best therapists spend 4-8 hours per week practicing and improving their skills through deliberate practice. An apprenticeship model with structures for continuous learning and improvement may help therapists develop expertise.
This document summarizes and critiques common myths about antidepressant medications. It discusses how popular culture and marketing have promoted the idea that depression is solely a biological condition cured by medication, rather than a complex issue influenced by various life experiences. However, the document asserts that research does not actually support the view that antidepressants are dramatically more effective than placebo pills or psychotherapy. It claims antidepressants have been exaggerated as "miracle drugs" due more to profit-driven marketing than objective science.
North & south counselling outcomes article march 2013Scott Miller
The document discusses the benefits of exercise for mental health. Regular physical activity can help reduce anxiety and depression and improve mood and cognitive function. Exercise causes chemical changes in the brain that may help protect against mental illness and improve symptoms for those who already suffer from conditions like anxiety and depression.
Snatching Victory From The Jaws Of Defeat (Handouts)Scott Miller
This document discusses improving the effectiveness of psychotherapy, especially for challenging cases. It provides both good and bad news about therapy outcomes. On average, treated clients do better than 80% of untreated clients. However, dropout rates are around 47% and some therapists fail to identify clients who are not progressing. The document recommends formalizing client feedback through measures of outcome and alliance administered at each session. Integrating this feedback into care through collaborative teams can help therapists "fail successfully" by changing course when needed to improve outcomes.
American journal of psychotherapy 2013 vol 67 pp 23 -46 (2) by paul clementScott Miller
This summarizes a study that analyzed outcome data from 1,599 psychotherapy patients seen by a private practitioner over 45 years. It found that 65.15% of patients were rated as improved or much improved after treatment, with a mean pre-/post-treatment effect size of 1.90. Patients and their parents rated outcomes more positively than the therapist. There was a positive relationship between length of treatment and better outcomes.
Marketing & Happiness: Through the Looking Glass of Positive PsychologyDavid Van Nuys
The document discusses how the field of positive psychology can provide a framework for qualitative market researchers. Positive psychology focuses on human strengths and happiness, moving away from merely studying pathology. It describes three types of happiness and explains that deeper, long-lasting forms of happiness come from relationships and virtues rather than money or possessions. Positive psychology research shows that happiness benefits health and longevity. The implications are that market researchers should listen for what sustains consumers' hope and joy in difficult times, and help clients address higher-level needs around sustainability and well-being.
This document provides an overview of cognitive therapy. It discusses Aaron Beck, the founder of cognitive therapy, and his background and influences. Beck developed cognitive therapy in the 1960s as an alternative to psychoanalysis, focusing on how a person's thinking affects their feelings and behaviors. Cognitive therapy views psychological disorders as stemming from dysfunctional thought patterns and cognitive distortions, rather than underlying unconscious desires. The document outlines seven common cognitive distortions identified by Beck and discusses how cognitive therapy aims to identify and change faulty assumptions and core beliefs through restructuring distorted thinking.
Social Media Influence Essay - Docsity. 005 Largepreview Essay Example On Impact Of Social Media Our ~ Thatsnotus. 014 Essay Example Largepreview On Impact Of Social Media Our ~ Thatsnotus.
This document provides an introduction to key Buddhist concepts for cognitive-behavioral therapists. It discusses the Buddhist view that suffering stems from clinging to a sense of fixed self and other. The path to reducing suffering involves practicing the Eightfold Noble Path, which diminishes clinging while enriching life experiences. Mindfulness and compassion are seen as synergistic and important for spiritual evolution through investigating underlying cognitive assumptions about self and other.
Beautiful Do Aliens Exist Persuasive Essay ~ Thatsnotus. (PDF) An Essay on Extraterrestrial Liberty. Alien Life Exists In Our World | Essay about life, Greatest mysteries .... Pin by Anastasia Matta on The World in 2020 | Space australia, Tumblr .... Extraterrestrial Life - Read a Free Essay Paper at Prime-Writing .... A Survey Of Student Attitudes To Alien Life Essay. The Search for Extraterrestrial Life: Essays on Science and Technology .... Extraterrestrials throughout history essay. Extraterrestrial life. Alien Essay Photo by kickbut622 | Photobucket. Extraterrestrial Life Essay | PDF. Extraterrestrial life: Searching for the right definition | ASU News. the Evidence for the Existence of Extraterrestrial Life.
The document discusses recent research into the neurobiology of stuttering and whether there are distinct subtypes. It introduces a new film on Solution Focused Brief Therapy and how it can help those who stutter. The document also honors longtime supporter Edward Rondthaler and his contributions to typography and bringing the field into the modern era of digital typography.
The document summarizes the evolution of psychoanalytic theory and psychotherapy. It discusses how Freud's ideas were modified by neo-Freudians like Adler, Jung, and Rank. It also describes developments like ego psychology, object relations theory, and self psychology that emphasized relationships and the present over childhood memories and instincts. Brief psychodynamic therapies were developed in response to cost pressures. Empirically supported treatments like interpersonal psychotherapy were also influenced by psychoanalysis but focus on current problems. Overall, psychodynamic approaches have been shown to be generally effective compared to no treatment.
Borderline Personality Disorder Ontogeny Of A DiagnosisDemona Demona
On April 1, 2008, the U.S. House of Representatives
unanimously passed House Resolution 1005 supporting
the month of May as borderline personality disorder
awareness month. The resolution stated that “despite its
prevalence, enormous public health costs, and the dev-
astating toll it takes on individuals, families, and com-
munities, [borderline personality disorder] only recently
has begun to command the attention it requires.” House
Resolution 1005, which was the outcome of public advo-
cacy efforts, drew attention to the disproportion between
the high public health significance of borderline person-
ality disorder and the low levels of public awareness,
funded research, and treatment resources associated
with the disorder. A recurrent theme in this review is the
persistence of borderline personality disorder as a sus-
pect category largely neglected by psychiatric institu-
tions, comprising a group of patients few clinicians want
to treat.
The document discusses several variables that can affect the outcomes of psychotherapy. It describes how psychotherapy requires motivation from patients and can be challenging, noting factors like a patient's level of distress, age, intelligence, and openness to the process. Gender is also mentioned as a variable, with questions around whether outcomes differ for male and female patients or if sexism influences therapy. The document aims to outline patient characteristics and variables in traditional therapies that can relate to treatment outcomes.
How to Write a Problem Solution Essay - Comprehensive Guide. How to Write a Problem Solution Essay: Guide with Examples. Topics To Write A Problem Solution Essay On. Problem solution essay examples. Problem-Solution Essay Outline. PROBLEM SOLUTION ESSAY - Tasha Forsberg Academic Writing 9/10/07. 001 Problem Solution Essay ~ Thatsnotus. The Problem/Solution Essay. Problem solution essay - Wang 1 Yifei Wang Kelly Schroeder English 10 .... 007 Problem Solution Essay Sample Ielts Example Samples Solving Photo .... Problem solution essay example ielts. Causes/Problems and Solutions Essay - Complete Success IELTS. Imposing Problem Solving Essay Examples Pdf ~ Thatsnotus. Problem Solution Essay Thesis and How to Write It.
paradigmatic controversies, contradictions, and emerging confluencesfelipemtz89
This document discusses paradigmatic controversies and emerging confluences in qualitative research. It summarizes the author's previous work which identified four research paradigms - positivism, postpositivism, critical theory, and constructivism - according to their ontological, epistemological and methodological assumptions. Since then, the participatory paradigm has been added. The author aims to further analyze the issues by rearranging them to reflect current thought, including debates around validity, the role of values, and the influence of feminist and other perspectives on the researcher's role in communities.
Here are the key advantages and disadvantages of adaptive histogram equalization:
Advantages:
- It improves contrast in images and enhances features that are difficult to see. This makes low-contrast objects more visible.
- It adapts to local changes in an image. This prevents over-amplification of noise that can occur with regular histogram equalization.
Disadvantages:
- It may amplify noise in relatively flat or uniform areas of an image.
- Artificial boundaries may appear at boundaries between tiles used for local adaptation. This can be reduced by using larger tile sizes.
- It is a more computationally intensive process than regular histogram equalization since it requires calculating histograms for multiple tiles.
In summary,
Pollution and Its Effects Essay | Essay on Pollution and Its Effects .... Essay on pollution (the problem of pollution) in english || Pollution .... 10 Lines on Pollution Essay in English for Students (2021) Narrative .... essay on pollution in english - Brainly.in. Pollution essay in english 300 words. Caleb's Cooking Company. 2019-02-19. Environmental Pollution Essay for Students and Children in English - A .... Essay on Environmental Pollution | Environmental Pollution essay .... Remarkable Pollution Essay ~ Thatsnotus. Pollution Essay | Pollution | Natural Environment. School essay: Essay writing effects of pollution. Essay on pollution and earth. Principle of Pollution Essay | Essay on Principle of Pollution for .... Write Short Essay on Pollution | Short Essay | English. an essay on pollution in english - Study Thinks. Environmental pollution essay in english for students - YouTube. Pollution Essay In English Class 7 | Sitedoct.org. Essay on environmental pollution wikipedia - Pollution - Simple English .... Essay on Pollution in English ! Short and Long Essays for Class 1 to 12. Essay On Pollution In English For Class 3 – Telegraph. Essay on Pollution In English Language || Environment Pollution Essay In English 400 Words. Essays on Pollution in English For Students. Pollution Essay – Pollution Essay in English by Online_Education - Issuu. Essay On Pollution And Its Causes – Telegraph. pollution essay class 7.
Most therapists want to improve their skills and help more clients. However, research shows that factors like personal therapy, specific treatment approaches, training, or experience do not necessarily correlate with better outcomes. After studying thousands of therapists over 15 years, one key factor was identified - "Healing Involvement", where therapists are fully engaged with clients through empathy, skills, efficacy, and handling difficulties constructively. This state can be achieved through career development improving skills over time, self-care reducing burnout, and connection to purpose and values in their work.
The document discusses several key aspects of existential counseling theory:
1) Existentialism views human nature as understanding man simply as a being and becoming, focused on one's awareness of self and definition of self.
2) Existential theory emphasizes meaning, subjectivity and process, separating it from other theories focused more on rationality and scientific techniques.
3) Most counseling theories emphasize rational, objective and scientific techniques from behavioral, cognitive and cognitive-behavioral perspectives, relegating existentialism to be combined with other theories.
Paper given in the Methodological and Philosophical Foundations of IS track at the International Conference on Information Systems (ICIS) Dublin 2016 - Nominated for Best Theory Paper.
Oxman et al a surrealistic mega analysis of redisorganization theoriesMarilyn Mann
This surrealistic review summarizes the lack of empirical evidence for organizational theories and repeated reorganizations in healthcare. The authors discovered that the most common reason for reorganizations is "no good reason" and that they perpetuate cycles of change. They identified indicators of successful reorganizations as activities that waste money, like large consulting fees for friends. The authors propose ethics committees to review future reorganization proposals to reduce uncontrolled experimentation on healthcare providers and users.
This document provides an overview of positive psychology, including its history and relationship to clinical psychology. Positive psychology is defined as the scientific study of positive experiences and traits that contribute to well-being and optimal functioning. While clinical psychology has traditionally focused on understanding and treating mental illness, positive psychology aims to broaden the focus to also include constructs like pleasure, engagement, meaning and character strengths. The authors argue that explicit positive interventions may effectively treat and prevent psychopathology by cultivating positive emotions and building strengths.
Similar to Is psychotherapy getting better (cole) (20)
Deterioration in Psychotherapy: A Summary of Research by Jorgen FlorScott Miller
This study explored how 10 Norwegian psychologists think about patient deterioration in psychotherapy. The psychologists showed a lack of common terminology around deterioration and underestimated its occurrence. They received little education on deterioration and felt uncomfortable discussing it. The study highlights the lack of awareness around negative outcomes in education and practice. It aims to provide a better basis for quantitative research on how deterioration is interpreted.
Summary of current research on routine outcome measurement, feedback, the validity, reliability, and effectiveness of the ORS and SRS (or PCOMS Outcome Management System)
Feedback informed treatment (fit) achieving(apa ip miller hubble seidel chow ...Scott Miller
1) The document discusses Feedback Informed Treatment (FIT), which uses routine monitoring of a client's progress and the therapeutic alliance to improve outcomes. Short scales like the Session Rating Scale and Outcome Rating Scale are used to gather feedback from clients.
2) Research shows that formal collection and discussion of client feedback doubles rates of reliable change, decreases dropout rates by 50%, and cuts deterioration rates by a third compared to treatment without feedback.
3) The feedback allows therapists to adjust their approach if a client is not progressing well or the alliance is weakening, in order to maximize the fit between client, therapist, and treatment for that individual.
Qualitative study of therapists working at Stangehjelp in Norway who are applying the principles of deliberate practice in their efforts to deliver more effective treatment services.
Final Rational Empirical Model for Identifying and Addressing Alliance RupturesScott Miller
The document presents the final version of a Rational-Empirical Model from 2015. This model appears to combine rational and empirical elements in analyzing a topic. Unfortunately, without more context around the specific model and its purpose, the summary is limited to these high-level details about its nature and date.
The Therapeutic Alliance, Ruptures, and Session-by-Session FeedbackScott Miller
Chris Laraway's doctoral dissertation presents a thorough review of the literature on the link between the therapeutic alliance and outcome, and how session by session feedback can be used to repair ruptures in the therapeutic relationship.
Effect size of common versus specific factorsScott Miller
Graphic representation of the contribution made by common versus specific factors to the outcome of psychotherapy. The slide documents the negligible contribution of the method, competence, and adherence.
Description of research in Sweden on a program to help people leave the disability rolls and go back to work. Several years ago, leaders adopted CBT as the primary treatment model. All practitioners were trained and over a billion Swedish Crowns were spent. The result? No effect. In fact, the percentage of people disabled by depression increased.
Medipex innovation awards 2015 press releaseScott Miller
The document summarizes the winners of the eleventh annual Medipex NHS Innovation Awards and Showcase. Seven teams were awarded across five categories for their innovative projects that improve patient care and make NHS services more efficient. The winners included mobile apps to improve doctor training feedback and patient communication, and initiatives to deliver intravenous treatments and orthotics at home. The awards recognize pioneering ideas developed collaboratively between NHS staff, universities, charities, and businesses.
The Carlat Psychiatry Report (Interview with Scott Miller, April 2015)Scott Miller
The April 2015 issue of the Carlat Psychiatry Report, an unbiased report/review of "all things psychiatric." The issue contains a lengthy interview with Dr. Scott Miller on the subject of top performing clinicians.
Why most therapists are average (german, 2014)Scott Miller
Interview with Scott Miller, reviewing outcome research from the field of therapy and addressing the question of why most therapists don't improve with time and experience.
How to Improve Quality of Services by Integrating Common Factors into Treatme...Scott Miller
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The economic value of monitoring patient treatment response (Lambert, 2014)
Is psychotherapy getting better (cole)
1. Illus
special anniversary issue
t r at
1 98 2 - 2O1 2
ion b
y
Ri c h a
rd Tu
This article’s title poses a challenging question, to be
sc
hman
sure—one filled with ambiguity and open to multiple answers.
Getting better than what? Getting better, in what way? Getting bet-
ter, according to whom? And the real kicker: Can we get better—and
how? But if these tough questions are to be asked, there would seem
to be no more fitting occasion than this magazine’s 30th anniversary
and the opportunity it provides to reflect on an era in the field of
psychotherapy during which systematic efforts to quantify and mea-
sure the key factors in the psychotherapeutic process received more
attention than ever before. n In a sense, the story of
A Progress Report
how to assess the effectiveness of therapy and how it
on the Science—
might be improved began in 1952, 30 years before the
and Art—of Our
first issue of this magazine appeared. In a classic paper
Profession
that year, outspoken behavior therapist Hans Eysenck,
one of the field’s leading provocateurs at that time, took on psychothera-
py. A staunch believer in science, he’d later be the subject of bomb threats
and publicly punched in the nose by a protestor for his controversial views
by
Diane Cole
Is PSYCHOTHERAPY
24 p s y c h o t he r a p y n E T W OR K E R n M a r c h / A p r il 2 0 1 2
3. on genetics and IQ differences.
The paper that concerns us here, “Our ability to simply put, the quest for
psychotherapeutic treat-
“The Effects of Psychotherapy: An ments that can be prov-
Evaluation,” asserted there was no en to work is especially
proof that psychotherapy worked. On
the contrary, he claimed that surveys treat all the important in the current
era of accountability and
showed that patients suffering from third-party reimbursement.
clinical neuroses improved after two Today, more than ever, time
years, whether or not they were treated
by a psychotherapist. anxiety disorders is money, and measured
results help determine the
“In the absence of agreement between allotment of both time and
fact and belief,” he proclaimed, “there money for patient services
is urgent need for a decrease in the
strength of belief, and for an increase with CBT is and for the professionals ren-
dering those services. In other
in the number of facts available. Until words, the stakes riding on
such facts as may be discovered in a the answer to the question of
process of rigorous analysis support the
prevalent belief in therapeutic effective- leaps and psychotherapy’s effectiveness
could scarcely be higher.
ness of psychological treatment, it seems
premature to insist on the inclusion of The RCT Model
training in such treatment in the cur-
riculum of the clinical psychologist.” bounds above Until recently, the most “scien-
tifically rigorous” answer to the
Eysenck concluded that the shortcom- question of determining effective-
ings of data “highlight the necessity of ness has been to adopt the model
properly planned and executed experi-
mental studies into this important field.” what it was of research applied within the
field of medicine—run randomly
The first blast had been fired, and controlled clinical trials (RCTs) to
it was up to the profession to answer establish evidence-based (also called
the challenge. Whatever its origins in
Freud’s grand speculations and couch- 30 years ago.” empirically supported or research-
supported) treatments that work bet-
based methodology, psychotherapy’s ter than a placebo. Just as in medical
modern quest for scientific legitimacy research, the goal has been to match
may be said to have begun here. a particular treatment regimen to a
From the get-go, however, measure- particular disorder. Aaron Beck, the
ment issues loomed: How do you go founder of Cognitive Therapy, had
about proving psychotherapy really is begun testing his systematic treatment
more effective than a placebo or more for depression as far back as 1973. But
helpful than a friendly, sympathetic carried the headline “Where’s the sci- clinical trials didn’t begin to become the
listener? How do you determine objec- ence? The sorry state of psychotherapy.” driving force they are today until 1993,
tive measures with which to identify, The release’s lead paragraph reads like when the APA established a task force
define, and quantify the variable, and an indictment: “The prevalence of men- within its Society of Clinical Psychology
sometimes intangible-seeming, factors tal health disorders in this country has to identify criteria for—and then review
and aspects that contribute to a suc- nearly doubled in the past 20 years. Who and provide a running list of—treat-
cessful course of treatment? Moreover, is treating all these patients? Clinical ments that could be shown to be effec-
as you go about establishing the science psychologists and therapists are charged tive for a variety of diagnosable disor-
of psychotherapy, what happens to the with the task, but many are falling short ders found in the DSM–IV.
intuitive art of psychotherapy? Until by using methods that are out of date and Before that task force could issue
recently, this divide between objective lack scientific rigor.” It goes on to cite a its first list of “empirically supported”
science and intuitive art characterizing study suggesting that, in the absence of treatments, however, a study appeared
the uneasy relationship between psy- such scientific rigor, “six out of every that, while lacking most essentials of
chotherapy’s researchers and practitio- seven sufferers were not getting the best gold-standard RCT research, power-
ners has appeared unbridgeable. care available from their clinicians.” fully established the effectiveness of
A 2009 press release from the Ouch. Listen closely and you can hear psychotherapy in the public mind. In
Association for Psychological Science, the echo of Hans Eysenck and déjà vu November 1995, a widely circulated
an organization formed by researchers all over again. So what is the science in survey of clients’ perceptions of their
who felt the American Psychological psychotherapy? And why is it so impor- treatment done by a team at Consumer
Association (APA) had become more tant? Set aside obvious reasons of public Reports (CR) gave psychotherapy’s legit-
of a guild than a scientific organization, trust and professional credibility, and, imacy a huge boost. According to a
26 p s y c h o t he r a p y n E T W OR K E R n M a r c h / A p r il 2 0 1 2
4. sample of 2,900, psychotherapy seemed of investigators. There are now treat- aged care. With providers today reim-
to work, whatever Hans Eysenck once ments that have successfully run this bursing patients for fewer sessions
thought. CR pooled 178,000 readers, research gauntlet and been approved than they did 30 years ago, studies
of whom only 7,000 responded. Of for a wide range of DSM disorders. are now looking at treatment courses
them, fewer than 3,000 had consulted Those who champion the “medi- that are shorter than they used to be.
some type of mental health provider. cal model” research approach believe Previously, “brief therapy” might have
Nonetheless, probably no single pub- it’s already demonstrated beyond meant 24 to 30 sessions. Clinical trials
lication has so influenced the popular question just how potent and reliable today tend to focus on the impact of
perception of the field. But what did it psychotherapy has become in reliev- 4, 8, or 12 sessions. The good news:
prove scientifically? ing human distress. Steven Hollon, a success is achieved in fewer sessions
Commenting on the report in the professor of psychology at Vanderbilt than in the past. Today, psychotherapy
December 1995 issue of American University, comments that, 30 years ago, not only has more empirically proven
Psychologist, Martin E. P. Seligman, APA “we didn’t even know the names for treatments, but is demonstrably more
president and psychology professor at some of the disorders” that can now be efficient. We now know that “You don’t
the University of Pennsylvania, provided treated effectively. By comparison, today have to beat around the bush and first
his own verdict on what CR had to say: there’s “hard empirical evidence” that establish a good working relationship
The study is not without flaws, the chief Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy (CBT), before getting to work,” says Hollon.
one being the limited meaning of its answer to interpersonal psychotherapy, and behav- “You just get to work.”
the question, “Can psychotherapy help?” This ioral activations work for a number of Effectiveness, efficiency, endurance:
question has three possible kinds of answers. specific disorders. Indeed, he says, you sounds like a winning trifecta. But not
The first is that psychotherapy does better than can treat pretty much any nonpsychotic everyone agrees that evidence-based
something else, such as talking to friends, disorder just as well with psychosocial testing has provided the evidence its
going to church, or doing nothing at all. interventions as you can with medica- supporters say it has.
Because it lacks comparison groups, the CR tion, and the results will not only be
study only answers this question indirectly. as good, but provide broader benefits, Rocking the Boat
The second possible answer is that psycho- such as the longer-lasting effects from In 2002, Bruce Wampold rocked the
therapy returns people to normality or more therapies like CBT that help patients boat of clinical testing big-time with the
liberally to within, say, two standard devia- learn how to help themselves. publication of The Great Psychotherapy
tions of the average. The CR study, lacking Dianne Chambless, professor of psy- Debate. In it, this professor of counseling
an untroubled group and lacking measures of chology and director of clinical train- psychology at the University of Wisconsin
how people were before they became troubled, ing at the University of Pennsylvania, delivered an in-depth critique of the
does not answer this question. The third and the researcher who oversaw the ini- medical model of psychotherapy, and
answer is, “Do people have fewer symptoms tial APA Society of Clinical Psychology did so not by the usual route of rejecting
and a better life after therapy than they did commission, also sees progress over the very idea of protocol-driven therapy
before?” This is the question that the CR the past decades. “I think we’ve really and appealing to notions that make
study answers with a clear “yes.” improved upon our ability to treat a therapists feel warm and fuzzy, like the
Even more important, Seligman con- number of different disorders, or have need for “authenticity” and “connec-
cluded, “Consumer Reports has provided effective treatments” for them, includ- tion,” but by invoking, of all things, sta-
empirical validation of the effective- ing anxiety disorders and interventions tistics. Deploying an impressive array of
ness of psychotherapy. Prospective and for bipolar disorders, she says. “Our sophisticated metanalyses on hundreds
diagnostically sophisticated surveys, ability to treat all the anxiety disorders of efficacy studies conducted through
combined with the well-normed and with CBT is leaps and bounds above the decades, Wampold concluded that
detailed assessment used in efficacy what it was 30 years ago.” there was “little or no evidence that any
studies, would bolster this pioneering What works, according to clinical stud- one treatment for any particular disor-
study. They would be expensive, but, in ies? From the start, behavior therapies der is better than another treatment
my opinion, very much worth doing.” of different kinds (including Cognitive intended to be therapeutic.”
In short, still more science was needed. Therapy) have been, and continue to What he did find evidence for is the
That was the mid-1990s, a time that be, the most prominently represented importance of the alliance between
had recently witnessed the ascendan- types of therapy on the list of effective patient and therapist. That, along with
cy of psychopharmacology and man- treatments. Dissenters have suggested the psychotherapist’s empathy for the
aged care—features of the therapeu- that this is because they’ve had the client and the patient’s positive expec-
tic landscape that have increased in longest history of testing, but advocates tation for treatment comprise the three
strength and dominance to this day. of evidence-based treatments say it’s key factors leading to a successful out-
Since then, expanded numbers of because they work. University research- come, he said. In other words, it’s
treatments have been deemed “well- ers and insurance companies looking not the treatment or the theoretical
established” after being tested in at for accountability have been among the model that makes the major differ-
least two randomized clinical trials, staunchest of those advocates. ence. Rather, the characteristics of the
each originating with a different team There’s also a connection to man- therapist and the client, independent
www . p s y c h o t he r a p y n e t w o r ke r . o r g 27
5. of specific treatment approaches, and how, evidence-based practice has come wrong things. Others include Wampold
the relationship factors mediating their to mean using a specific method for and Brigham Young University psychol-
connection have far more impact than a specific diagnosis, when it actually ogy professor Michael Lambert. What
the “treatment factors” themselves. means using approaches supported sets Miller apart is his crusader’s zeal
Perhaps the old-fashioned clinicians by the best evidence in a treatment for shaking up the status quo and his
who’d long stressed the human, non- informed by client preferences, cul- polemicist’s flair for presenting his argu-
technical elements of the therapeutic tural context, and feedback. He adds, ment in the most provocative light. He
encounter—what are often referred “There’s no proof that clinicians who insists that to improve the quality of care
to as the “common factors” underlying use particular models applied to spe- in the field it’s not the treatments or pro-
effective therapy—were right after all. cific diagnoses achieve better results. tocols that need adjusting, it’s the atti-
The Great Psychotherapy Debate was the What’s more, available data indicate tudes and skills of individual practitioners
equivalent of a devastating body-blow that real-world clinicians achieve the that need to change. For psychotherapy
to those favoring the medical model same degree of treatment success as to get “better,” he believes, therapists
of psychotherapy, with its emphasis those in randomized clinical trials. So themselves need to get better at getting
on finding the right treatment for what’s all the fuss about?” their clients better.
any given DSM disorder. By all means, Going beyond a critique of empirical- In making his case, Miller begins with
follow the science, Wampold urged, ly supported treatments, Miller makes what initially seems like an odd analogy
but also make sure you know what the the larger point that, far from estab- to—of all things—airline safety. But fas-
science is saying: the medical model lishing the scientific bona fides of its ten your seat belts, and let him explain.
may not be the best model for under- methods, the psychotherapy communi- Over the past 35 years, he says, the num-
standing how psychotherapy works. ty, in fact, hasn’t had the public health ber of American commercial airline
His research showed that the “medi- impact it promised three decades ago. crashes has decreased significantly, yet
cine” of a particular psychotherapeutic He points out that, by most measures, the technology of the planes themselves
treatment itself isn’t the transportable the sheer number of people suffering hasn’t changed dramatically. What’s
object that, say, a dose of penicillin from mental health problems is on the changed is pilot training—to include
is. Then, again, neither can a skilled increase. Anyone who reads the head- a focus on safety and an emphasis on
psychotherapist be mass-produced to lines—high unemployment, poverty, maintaining standards of professional
deliver the key ingredients of empathy returning veterans—knows those needs excellence in individual performance.
and therapeutic alliance that make the aren’t diminishing. Miller also wonders What that has to do with psychother-
difference in what Wampold terms the how it’s possible that a profession can apy is this: by contrast to airplane pilots
“contextual model” of psychotherapy. amass so many new clinical techniques and other highly skilled professions,
If, as Wampold asserted, treatment and approaches, and yet see a rise in in the field of psychotherapy, Miller
methods were a far less potent factor the number of people suffering. says, “we’ve applied nothing that’s been
in influencing the effectiveness of psy- Most troubling of all, he says, is that, learned from the literature on excel-
chotherapy than had been previously despite all the expansion of therapeu- lence to strengthening our expertise
thought, what had all the research tic knowledge and enormous amount and skills.” Moreover, the pathway for
on empirically supported approaches of research activity in the field, overall, psychotherapists to achieve excellence,
actually proven? Did study after study the average positive impact of psy- he believes, isn’t illuminated particular-
showing a certain method’s superiority chotherapy hasn’t changed since the ly by clinical research studies document-
to a placebo necessarily mean that the first metanalyses done in the 1970s. ing the efficacy of a specific treatment
field had gone as far as its proponents Somewhere between 66 and 75 per- or technique. Instead, the way forward
like Chambless and Hollon believed? cent of patients appear to improve lies, first, in studying the traits shared by
Did the widespread conviction that from treatment. Nevertheless, Miller the most effective psychotherapists (in
psychotherapy had come a long way remains a believer in the effectiveness the same way that, say, the medical or
since the days of Hans Eysenck need to of therapy. “When you look at the statis- management or legal professions seek
be reconsidered? tics, the success rate for psychotherapy to identify the traits associated with best
is on par with common medical pro- practices in their fields), and then, get-
Making Therapists cedures like coronary bypass surgery,” ting others up to speed. This, he says,
Better he says. Yet his reading of the research can be accomplished with evidence that
Well, yes and no. Scott Miller, a founder literature leaves him unconvinced that comes not from clinical trials of specific
of the International Center for Clinical even a drastic increase in the number protocols, but evidence generated by
Excellence, says, “I agree with the trend of therapists offering specific treat- therapists themselves, based on their
toward evidence-based practice. It’s just ments for specific disorders would have own strengths—and weaknesses.
that what’s being advocated by some any real effect on therapy’s success rate. It’s known as feedback.
is decidedly not ‘evidence-based prac- Miller is just one of a number of critics Instead of focusing on evidence about
tice’—at least not according to the of traditional therapy outcome research “better” treatments garnered from
APA’s definition, or that of the Institute who believe that evidence-based investi- clinical trials, he says, psychotherapists
of Medicine.” He explains that, some- gators too often have been studying the should seek out systematic feedback
28 p s y c h o t he r a p y n E T W OR K E R n M a r c h / A p r il 2 0 1 2
6. according to Lambert, is spotting prob-
“Available lems early in the process. “Therapists
are overly optimistic about their ability
data indicate to help patients, and they ignore, or
even have a positive view about, people
getting worse, in that they believe,
that real-world erroneously, that in order to get bet-
ter, you first have to get worse,” he
explains. “When they see a patient get-
clinicians achieve ting worse, that doesn’t alarm them.”
Lambert’s system doesn’t allow thera-
the same degree pists not to be alarmed.
His Outcome Questionnaire (OQ)
is longer than Miller’s (45 questions,
of treatment measuring symptoms, relationship
problems, and social-role function).
Both the OQ and Miller’s measure
success as those can be scored electronically, and are
designed to send the therapist an alert
in randomized when the measurements fall below a
certain level. That serves as a wake-up
call to tell therapists to pay attention,
clinical trials. treatment is off track, and they should
reevaluate and modify what they’re
about their own performance and
case outcomes in the form of sim- So what’s all doing. The OQ’s own track record
is impressive. In eight studies (six of
ple questionnaires that patients can them published) so far, the failure rate
fill out prior to each session. Miller
is part of a group that’s developed
the fuss of therapists using the OQ declined to
6 percent in comparison with a failure
the four-question Outcome Rating rate of 21 percent among therapists
Scale (ORS), an easy-to-use instru-
ment for tracking treatment prog-
about?” not using the feedback measure. The
briefer ORS has been tested in three
ress, as well as a therapeutic alliance major studies, and a recent metanalysis
checklist that helps therapist and client completed by Lambert shows that both
make sure their goals for therapy are measures improve outcomes.
aligned. It’s his contention that those Still, some clinicians remain skepti-
answers—about the client’s well-being cal that closely attending to clients’
and sense of progress—are a form of ly on their intuitive judgments about feedback is the magic bullet that some
practical research that enables thera- which interventions will work or when of its advocates seem to claim. “One of
pists to gauge how they’re doing, session to alter treatment tactics, despite the the problems with feedback-informed
by session, and patient by patient. By well-established fact that intuition by approach is that it too often seems to
regularly and systematically putting that itself is notoriously unreliable, even operate as a kind of customer-is-always-
mirror up to themselves, psychothera- for veteran clinicians. Everyone needs right model,” says William Doherty of
pists can become aware immediately of outside norms, baselines, and refer- the University of Minnesota. “But what
clinical missteps and errors in judgment ence points by which to double-check if the complaints the client has about
that might otherwise go undetected those judgments; feedback instruments how therapy is going is a reflection of
until a client dropped out or ended provide them. At the same time, feed- the very problem that brought him into
treatment without deriving the antici- back helps the therapist align with the therapy in the first place?”
pated benefits. patient’s goals and then match treat-
Clinicians like Miller and Lambert, ments to them. It provides another tool The Context of Practice
his graduate-school mentor and the for “listening” to the patient’s response If the question of the effectiveness of
pioneer of developing feedback mea- style in treatment. So that, for instance, psychotherapy and how to increase it
sures, think that regularly assessing if your client doesn’t like feeling like hinges on the debate between the evi-
therapeutic progress is fundamental he’s being “told” what to do, such feed- dence-based traditionalists and the feed-
to helping clinicians more dependably back can give you the heads-up that you back-informed insurgents, some believe
steer their course in therapy. They need to try a less directive approach. the simplest resolution is, essentially,
believe that such systems are essential A crucial consideration in improv- to split the difference and put aside
because therapists too often rely sole- ing overall levels of treatment success, an unproductive disagreement about
I l l u s t r at i o n b y B r u n o B u d r ov i c www . p s y c h o t he r a p y n e t w o r ke r . o r g 29
7. whose type of research is superior. Such
is the view of John Norcross, profes-
“When you think see how people actu-
ally employ these tools
sor of psychology and distinguished
university fellow at the University of
Scranton. Why take sides or engage in
about how little in their work. There are
also the generic skills that
cut across models that the
polarizing arguments, he asks, about research says are funda-
what’s more important: the treatment
method or the therapist–client rela-
real incentive there mental to helping build alli-
ances with our clients and
tionship. “Sensible people don’t have a achieving good outcomes.
debate on all this,” he says.
What is sensible, he believes, is to
is in our field But once you’re out of your
initial grad-school training,
take the approach that, when it comes how can you develop those
to treatment choices, different strokes
work for different folks. Every type
to improve our skills? Peer consultation too
often leads only to the discus-
of therapy has its inadequacies and sion of cases at a theoretical
won’t work 100 percent of the time
for 100 percent of people, he says.
skills, it’s level, or at the level of abstract
strategy.” There’s also an isola-
“There isn’t one method. There are tion factor endemic to the field,
multiple methods.” Whatever the
method, what’s most important is to
hard to escape the he notes. “People don’t actually
get to see each other’s work and
go beyond either/or debates. In fact, learn about the nuances of deal-
Norcross has coauthored a new book
with Michael Lambert, Evidence-Based
conclusion that ing with the unpredictable things
that happen in therapy. Most of
Therapy Relationships, in which the two us aren’t part of communities of
deplore the “culture wars in psycho-
therapy” that pit polarized camps of
the attitude is practice in which the norm is close
examination of what we actually do
evidence-based treatment champions with our clients.”
against those who advocate the over-
arching importance of the therapist–
it really doesn’t Putting it more pointedly, profes-
sor emeritus Jay Efran of Temple
client relationship. Such squabbles University says, “How do you improve
only distract from the shared goal of
all, the authors say, which is “to pro- matter.” as a therapist? You can’t read how to
do it in a book. When you think about
vide the most efficacious psychological how little real incentive there is in our
services to our patients.” field to improve our skills, it’s hard to
Norcross prefers to emphasize the escape the conclusion that, in some
importance of the two types of research way, the attitude is it really doesn’t mat-
in helping psychotherapy continue ter. Think about it. If you’re a surgeon,
to progress. “It’s the mutual inter- their skills, they insist that it’s important you’re regularly held accountable in a
play between both of these—between to grasp the everyday context in which way therapists aren’t.”
practice and research—that’s leading most therapists practice. To understand Viewed in this way, the discussion
to more effective and more efficient why overall success rates in our pro- about evidence-based practice versus
psychotherapy,” he notes. As he and fession don’t appear to be improving what the feedback-informed advocates
Lambert write in their book: “Decades despite all the new information coming like to call “practice-based evidence”
of psychotherapy research consistently into the field about the brain, mindful- seems too narrow and rarefied, ignor-
attest that the patient, the therapist, their ness, and the mind-body connection, ing too much of the nitty-gritty reality
relationship, the treatment method, and and all the research results being regu- of how most therapists ply their trade.
the context all contribute to treatment larly reported in the journals, they say Until we look more closely at the actual
success (and failure). . . . We should be you must grasp the fact that this infor- context of practice, it’s unlikely that
looking at all of these determinants and mation isn’t being conveyed to thera- psychotherapy will change markedly.
their optimal combinations.” pists in ways that help them improve “Where are the incentives for improv-
But others believe that reducing the their actual performance with clients. ing our therapeutic outcomes, or even
argument about psychotherapy’s effec- “In our field, there are model-spe- to become more aware of how we’re
tiveness to a debate between two differ- cific skills—the procedures you need doing?” asks Doherty, echoing Efran’s
ent research models ignores far more to learn to do EMDR or CBT or EFT,” point. “If you look at it broadly, most of
crucial considerations. Looking at the says William Doherty. “We go to didactic us don’t practice in a context that offers
broader issues of how clinicians are workshops to keep up with new develop- a stimulating or effective learning envi-
trained and the incentives currently ments, but that’s done largely through ronment for improving our skills. For
offered for therapists to further develop lecture, with minimal opportunity to most of us, therapy is a private art form,
30 p s y c h o t he r a p y n E T W OR K E R n M a r c h / A p r il 2 0 1 2
8. done behind closed doors in our solo on the spectrum from clinical failure at Northwestern University tracks the
practices or in group practices where to success. To determine whether their session-by-session progress of therapy.
there’s little coordination or shared dis- current cases are headed toward positive But instead of relatively simple question-
cussion of the challenging cases we’re or negative outcomes, members com- naires, the STIC features an initial assess-
facing. I think too many therapists feel pare them with those in the database ment of 30 different personality, behav-
that there’s no real system around them. by entering their own session-by-session ior, and relationship dimensions and
If this field is to do a better job of serv- feedback measures for the therapeutic collects information not only on indi-
ing the clients who come to us, we need alliance and overall client functioning. vidual clients, but on every participant
a much more radical solution than Beginning with the second session (so in couples or family therapy. Because
just having more clinicians do more that patterns of progress, stagnation, or it’s scored and displayed on a computer,
evidence-based therapy.” decline can be determined from the get- with easy-to-read graphic displays, it can
go), therapists can see whether a case be filled out relatively quickly. Clients
Changing Attitudes is likely to have a positive or negative fill out STIC measures throughout treat-
In fact, some believe that the inno- conclusion. When a case is progress- ment, which are e-mailed directly to
vations most likely to influence the ing, a green lamp lights up, while no therapists. They can consult the mea-
future of the field may come not so progress is indicated by a yellow lamp. A sures before a session and get an instant
much from theoreticians, clinical inno- red lamp is the attention-getting symbol sense of what’s happened between ses-
vators, or psychotherapy researchers, indicating that a case seems headed for sions and whether a case is progressing.
but from advances that make it eas- an unsuccessful outcome. It’s not that the STIC dictates a particu-
ier for therapists to learn and mas- Of course, the system is far from lar intervention, but it gives the therapist
ter their craft. “We don’t need some foolproof and offers no crystal ball, but information that might otherwise be
great new therapeutic breakthroughs it provides the kind of normative data missed, especially about potentially dam-
to make great strides in improving previously unavailable to most clini- aging ruptures that have taken place in
the quality of our outcomes as a pro- cians that practitioners can use to chart the alliance with clients.
fession,” says Susanne Bargmann, a the course of cases, especially challeng- “The therapist may have pushed too
Danish psychotherapist and trainer ing ones, adding a new dimension to hard or responded in a way that a client
who helped create the International their tool kit with potentially dramatic didn’t perceive as empathic in a previ-
Center for Clinical Excellence (ICCE), consequences. Beyond the color-coded ous session,” says Pinsof. “Typically, the
the world’s largest web-based therapist alerts that offer a sense of accountabil- client might not say anything about
learning community—currently used ity and urgency with cases in trouble, this, but the STIC gives the therapist a
by 4,000 psychotherapists—dedicated a key element of the Fit-Outcomes way of finding out that, for example, a
to improving the standards of practice management system is the opportu- client’s trust in the therapist declined
in the field. “We could raise the level nity for members to send posts to the in the last session. Knowing this before-
of our clinical work enormously if we community of fellow practitioners to hand enables the therapist to point to
simply took more time to review our share frustrations, ask questions, and the STIC scores and say, ‘It looks like
cases, especially when we’re stuck, and get new ideas any time of the day or something happened between us last
got concrete help when we made mis- night. Wherever you are on the planet, time’ and bring that into the thera-
takes or had questions,” she says. “A big no matter how geographically remote, peutic conversation.” When used as a
part of the barrier to doing that is one you can ask for help with challenging tool for monitoring and repairing the
of attitude. Right now, too many thera- clients through ICCE. “Being a solo therapeutic relationship in this way,
pists think that what they already do is practitioner can be very isolating,” says Pinsof believes that it amplifies the
perfect, or else that it’s too dangerous Australian psychologist and ICCE mem- client’s voice and equips the clinician
to acknowledge your clinical shortcom- ber Vanessa Spiller. “Having a support- with an additional sixth sense, helping
ings. But, actually, the only time you ive, like-minded community in which I to overcome the blind spots that are
ever learn something new is when you can ask questions and present ideas and inevitable in every human relation-
make a mistake.” thoughts, and have people critically ship. He insists that STIC deepens the
There are many resources available review these, has been very helpful. therapy process and empowers both
on the ICCE website that Bargmann It’s been great to be able to access this therapists and clients, rather than tak-
developed with Scott Miller and others, ‘oasis of international expertise,’ pro- ing away therapists’ autonomy, like a
but the centerpiece is the Fit-Outcomes viding me with peers willing to critically therapeutic protocol can.
management system, a specially pro- review my work, identify some of my
grammed database of more than unquestioned assumptions, and make Technology and
100,000 cases with which practitioners specific suggestions for changes I can the Future
can determine whether their current implement and objectively evaluate.” While technology often is seen as a dep-
cases are on track. Including both out- Like the ICCE system, a database ersonalizing force in our lives, some
come measures and session-by-session called the Systemic Therapy Inventory are beginning to argue that the digital
feedback scores, the cases loaded onto for Change (STIC) being developed by revolution may be the primary means
the site are categorized by their location William Pinsof of the Family Institute Continued on page 50
www . p s y c h o t he r a p y n e t w o r ke r . o r g 31
9. Cole from page 31 lar client or couple or family, she’ll be
by which the standard of care within able to see how a sample of thousands
in the field will rise to a new level. The of past clients with matching character-
expanded video capabilities of the Web istics responded to various treatment
are already opening up learning and options.” Pinsof likens his feedback
training opportunities that can help system to an X-ray, blood analysis, or
therapists further develop their clini- MRI in medicine, and considers his
cal skills. Cognitive Therapy pioneer feedback and reporting instruments
Donald Meichenbaum is developing a as sources of vital information that,
website that’ll offer video demonstra- one day, will be part of every thera-
tions of what he considers the core pist’s essential tool kit, ensuring greater
skills required for effective practice, accountability and better care.
along with assessment instruments to So it appears that whether therapy
determine which of those skills a given progresses to a new level of effective-
practitioner might need to improve. ness may be determined, not by some
The Networker regularly broadcasts game-changing discovery of new meth-
video interviews with accomplished ods, but by whether we can change
experts in a range of clinical topics like our time-honored distrust of the very
couples therapy, trauma, and mindful- concept of “research.” “Most therapists
ness practice that focus directly on the today see research as something that’s
fundamentals of clinical craft too often intimidating and controlling, and don’t
ignored in therapists’ training. Its goal believe they can integrate scientific data
is to radically expand the range of into their work without compromising
observable clinical role models avail- their clinical intuition and judgment,”
able to practitioners around the world. says Pinsof. But as technology makes it
The ease of video recording today possible to make immediate, practical
makes it possible for clinicians to con- use of data in managing the ongoing
veniently review their own sessions, therapeutic relationship, therapists will
either with colleagues or supervisors, be increasingly encouraged to become
and zero in on the nuances of session more discerning investigators of their
management and intervention that go own practices and more attuned col-
beyond generalized discussion, provid- laborators with their clients, especially
ing the kind of immediate feedback when things are looking grim or uncer-
that the literature on human perfor- tain in the consulting room.
mance and mastery tells us is necessary As 21st-century technology increas-
to change behavior and enhance skill. ingly makes itself felt in psychothera-
Some of the new digital systems being py, it seems that the pathway toward
developed offer possibilities that might enhanced effectiveness will require the
have seemed like science fiction just a field’s practitioners to bring together
few years ago. For example, Pinsof is knowledge domains often treated as
now working on an adjunct to STIC, distinct. Regardless of how hi-tech and
called the Integrative Therapy Session data-driven some of the tools practi-
Report, which will gather measures of tioners use in their pursuit of clini-
therapists’ techniques session by ses- cal excellence become, however, the
sion. “After a session, we ask therapists therapist’s demanding, evolving craft
to detail what specific interventions will remain one in which both art and
and client strategies they used. This science are inextricably intertwined. n
additional information is integrated
with the ordinary STIC data to show New York City–based Diane Cole is the
how the progress of a case—or lack author of the memoir After Great Pain:
of it—can be related to the therapist’s A New Life Emerges, and writes for
interventions. As more data are col- many national publications. You can reach
lected, this will give us a road map of her at djcole86@gmail.com. Tell us what
how a broad range of clients with all you think about this article by e-mail at
kinds of characteristics responded to letters@psychnetworker.org, or at www.
different kinds of interventions at dif- psychotherapynetworker.org. Log in and
ferent stages of the therapy process. So you’ll find the comment section on every
when a therapist is stuck with a particu- page of the online Magazine.
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