1 / 36

Psychotherapy research findings: What the evidence is telling us

Psychotherapy research findings: What the evidence is telling us. Mick Cooper Professor of Counselling University of Strathclyde, Glasgow mick.cooper@strath.ac.uk. Aims of talk. Review what we know about the effectiveness of therapy, and the role of the therapeutic relationship .

maegan
Télécharger la présentation

Psychotherapy research findings: What the evidence is telling us

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Psychotherapy research findings: What the evidence is telling us Mick Cooper Professor of Counselling University of Strathclyde, Glasgow mick.cooper@strath.ac.uk

  2. Aims of talk • Review what we know about the effectiveness of therapy, and the role of the therapeutic relationship

  3. Overall effectiveness

  4. Does therapy work?

  5. How well does it work? • Meta-analyses indicate medium to large positive effects: mean effect size (d) ≈ 0.4 – 0.6 (Lambert, 2013) • Shows greater ‘effect’ than many medical or surgical procedures • 7 out of 10 better off than average person who doesn’t have therapy

  6. GP Bruce Therapy

  7. More therapy associated with more improvement - but of decelerating benefit

  8. And… • Therapeutic gains generally maintained • People who do well tend to keep on doing so • Cost-effective – particularly where savings on in-patient costs • Approximately 5-10% get worse

  9. What makes therapy effective?

  10. Therapist’s orientation? • Has been most controversial question in field • Depends how you ‘cut the cake’?

  11. Empirically supported therapies perspective ‘Which psychological methods are of proven effectiveness for particular psychological problems?’

  12. More evidence ≠ More effective

  13. ‘Perhaps the best predictors of whether a treatment finds its way to the empirically supported list are whether anyone has been motivated (and funded) to test it and whether it is readily testable in a brief manner’ (Westen et al., 2004)

  14. Comparative outcome studies • Most studies comparing different method show no (or only small) differences between therapies… • Especially where both therapies bona fide and/or allegiance effects controlled

  15. Comparison of CBT and non-directive counselling (King et al., 2000)

  16. Comparison of outcomes for 1309 clients in UK primary care (Stiles et al., 2006) More improvement Pre-post diff. in CORE-OM score CBT PCT PDT CBT+1 PCT+1 PDT +1 (psychodynamic)

  17. The ‘Dodo bird’ verdict • ‘Everyone has won and all must have prizes’ • Wampold (2001): Less than 1% of variance in outcomes due to orientation

  18. Therapist factors

  19. ‘Supershrinks’ and ‘pseudoshrinks’ • One study found that clients of most effective therapist improved 10x greater than average; clients of least effective therapists got worse • Approx. 5% of variance in outcomes seems due to specific therapist • But why? Some therapists have significantly better outcomes than others

  20. Professional characteristics • Most professional characteristics only minimally related to effectiveness: • Training • Status (e.g., professional vs. para-) • Experience as therapist • Life-experience • Amount of supervision

  21. Personal characteristics • Effectiveness also not strongly linked to: • Personality characteristics • Level of psychological wellbeing (including amount of personal therapy) • Gender • Ethnicity • Age

  22. Therapist--client matching • Clients from marginalised social groups and/or with strong values may do better with therapists who are similar

  23. Relational factors

  24. ‘Lambert’s pie’: % of improvement in therapy as function of therapeutic factors

  25. ‘Promising but insufficient research’ • Congruence/genuineness • Repairing alliance ruptures • Managing countertransference

  26. ‘Probably effective’ elements • Goal consensus • Collaboration • Positive regard

  27. ‘Demonstrably effective’ elements of the relationship (Norcross, 2011) • Therapeutic alliance • Cohesion in group therapy • Empathy • Collecting client feedback

  28. Collecting client feedback • Major new development in field: e.g., Lambert, Miller, Duncan • Services track individual outcomes, and feed back to therapist if deterioration • Also, ‘process’ and relationship feedback

  29. So is it the relationship that heals? • Correlations between factors and outcomes not evidence that former causes latter • Evidence for self-help therapies indicates that relationship not always necessary • Quality of therapeutic relationship not determined by therapist alone…

  30. Client factors

  31. Client factors = 70% +

  32. Clients’ participation • Possibly ‘the most important determinant’ of outcome (Orlinsky) • Positive outcomes associated with: • Involvement • Active choosing of therapy • Realistic expectations • Motivation

  33. Capacity to ‘use’ therapy • Better outcomes associated with ‘better’ psycho-social functioning: • Secure attachment style • Higher psychological mindedness • Absence of ‘personality disorders’ • Lower perfectionism • More advanced stage of change • Greater social support

  34. Capitalisation vs. Compensation • Therapy seems to work by helping clients to capitalise on their strengths, rather than compensating for the ‘deficiencies’

  35. Summary • The principal driving force of therapeutic change is an active and engaged client • But the client’s change process can be greatly facilitated if they work with a therapist who can understand and engage deeply with their ‘trajectory’ of change

More Related