Silverman 2005
Silverman 2005
                                                                                                                     Dynamically oriented psychotherapy has only infrequently been tested to demonstrate its
                                                                                                                     effectiveness when compared with other kinds of therapeutic interventions. Of course, this
                                                                                                                     does not mean that it lacks effectiveness; rather there has been reduced commitment to
                                                                                                                     empirical testing, probably owing to insufficient support from the therapeutic–analytic
                                                                                                                     community. This is unfortunate. Given the effectiveness of some demonstrated forms of
                                                                                                                     therapeutic intervention, there should be wide support for empirical testing in our
                                                                                                                     community. This might well reverse the reliance on medicine rather than psychotherapy
                                                                                                                     as the treatment of choice for a host of problems. However, for the most part, those trained
                                                                                                                     as psychoanalysts have not adopted this orientation. It has been considered unnecessary
                                                                                                                     or, even worse, scientism. Beutler (2000a) suggested a reason for the lack of flexibility in
                                                                                                                     our views. He noted,
                                                                                                                          Certainly psychotherapy—and mental health more broadly—is a field in which the belief in
                                                                                                                          clinical observation and the creative expression of the theorists has always been valued more
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                                                                                                                                                                BRIEF REPORT                                               307
                                                                                                                          highly than results from scientific method, nomothetic research and statistical analysis. Garb
                                                                                                                          (1998), for example, observed that when scientific and personal beliefs contradict, clinicians
                                                                                                                          are highly prone to accept the latter and discount the former. Thus, there has always been and
                                                                                                                          continues to be significant distrust of those who would question, let alone test, the validity of
                                                                                                                          the great theories and practices of the masters. . . . In reviewing this history, it is apparent that
                                                                                                                          among any group of like-minded practitioners, the standard of evidence for validity of a
                                                                                                                          clinical practice has often been whether it fits the theory, whether the advocates strongly
                                                                                                                          believe in the truth of their theories, and whether they appear to be sincere in advocating the
                                                                                                                          value of clinical experience in support of their beliefs. (p. 2)
                                                                                                                     Can we, as dynamically oriented clinicians, begin to rethink our positions with regard to
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                                                                                                                     our view of what constitutes clinical practice? This is important for our field, not only in
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                                                                                                                     terms of intellectual rigor but also in that monies for the selection of future candidates for
                                                                                                                     training in psychology; the development of the clinical curriculum; training in assessment,
                                                                                                                     diagnosis, and prediction; accreditation decisions; continuing education sponsorship;
                                                                                                                     provisions for research grants; National Institute of Mental Health awards and fellow-
                                                                                                                     ships; funding from local and state governments; insurance reimbursements; and the like
                                                                                                                     will be responsive to this broadened definition of therapeutic practice.
                                                                                                                         Prior to evidence-based practice, in physical medicine, for example, interventions
                                                                                                                     were based on some experimental work but mainly with limited knowledge, belief
                                                                                                                     systems, and anecdotal views of what worked. Thus, a belief system dominated the use of
                                                                                                                     bloodletting to relieve fever. It killed millions of patients and it took centuries to overturn
                                                                                                                     (Barlow, 2004). Even more dramatic is an instance of experimental work that was ignored
                                                                                                                     at the peril of loss of life. This is a story dating to the 1600s, when a British naval officer
                                                                                                                     concerned about the high death rate that occurred on long voyages conducted a controlled
                                                                                                                     study using three different ships at sea. On one ship, sailors were given three teaspoons
                                                                                                                     of lemon juice daily in addition to the regular restricted diet provided to sailors at sea.
                                                                                                                     Halfway through the voyage, 110 out of 278 sailors on their usual diet were dead; in
                                                                                                                     contrast, none of the sailors who received the lemon juice died. It took 264 years before
                                                                                                                     regular vitamin C was part of the diet of sailors on sea trips (Barlow, 2004).
                                                                                                                         Currently we rely on evidence-based medicine, and it has proven its usefulness. In
                                                                                                                     medicine, the guidelines now suggested are those that reflect “conscientious, explicit and
                                                                                                                     judicious use of current best evidence in making decisions about the care of individual
                                                                                                                     patients” (Sackett, Rosenberg, & Gray, 1996). Such an approach has provided procedures
                                                                                                                     for informed decisions about efficacious treatment for various disease entities. Such
                                                                                                                     information needs to be assimilated and then integrated with all of the relevant informa-
                                                                                                                     tion known, as well as an understanding of the potential consequences for the individual
                                                                                                                     patient. The system is far from perfect, and currently we know much more about the
                                                                                                                     power, influence, and potential shaping features of pharmaceutical companies in influ-
                                                                                                                     encing clinical decisions. Nonetheless, if used properly, it can be an effective and valid
                                                                                                                     approach in guiding the course of decision making.
                                                                                                                         Evidence-based research has also been applied to various areas of the mental health
                                                                                                                     field (Drake et al., 2001). We now have sufficient scientific evidence to claim that
                                                                                                                     psychotherapy is safe and effective, with lasting results for a large number of patients,
                                                                                                                     across a wide range of problems (Luborsky, Singer, & Luborsky, 1975; Smith & Glass,
                                                                                                                     1977; Wampold et al., 1997). There is research addressing what key variables should be
                                                                                                                     attended to in helping seriously maladapted patients such as schizophrenics. Research has
                                                                                                                     demonstrated the therapeutic effectiveness of psychotherapy at its termination and in
                                                                                                                     follow-up study, when contrasted with medication or alternative treatments, in several
                                                                                                                     areas: incontinence in women, insomnia, delay of institutionalization of patients with
                                                                                                                     308                                       BRIEF REPORT
                                                                                                                     Alzheimer’s disease, depression, and persistent pain, fatigue, and cognitive symptoms
                                                                                                                     found in veterans of the Gulf War. Chronic depression is most successfully treated with
                                                                                                                     medication and psychotherapy, and this combination is far more effective than either
                                                                                                                     drugs alone or a placebo. Like the effectiveness of clinician’s expertise in psychotherapy,
                                                                                                                     experience and excellence in pharmacology is relevant. Knowledge and familiarity with
                                                                                                                     assessment, dosage, and monitoring both for effectiveness and for adverse effects are
                                                                                                                     essential, as is the recognition that drug termination, as compared with psychotherapeutic
                                                                                                                     interventions, often lead to a recurrence of symptoms (Hollon, 1996; Lambert, 2004).
                                                                                                                     Research has attended to the kind of useful services that might be offered to children with
                                                                                                                     severe developmental disorders, and it has helped formulate and establish a variety of
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                                                                                                                     important social policy decisions that have emerged on the basis of this orientation. Here
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                                                                                                                     I have captured only a small aspect of this beneficial approach. I would think that few
                                                                                                                     analysts are aware of the various task forces that have existed to study particular issues
                                                                                                                     and their resulting documents. Such task force documents are sponsored and produced at
                                                                                                                     the national (e.g., American Psychological Association), division, and state level. For
                                                                                                                     example, Division 29 of the American Psychological Association (Norcross, 2001)
                                                                                                                     produced a summary report of empirically supported therapy relationships. A Hawaii task
                                                                                                                     force has evaluated mental health services for children and has provided summary reviews
                                                                                                                     of the best treatments available for various childhood disorders (Chorpita et al., 2002).
                                                                                                                         Thorough, careful, systematic investigation of outcome research in psychotherapy has
                                                                                                                     long since lain to rest Eysenck’s questions about the effectiveness of psychotherapies
                                                                                                                     (Orlinsky, Ronnestad, & Willutski, 2004). Meta-analyses have also allowed for the
                                                                                                                     establishment of an effect size, so that the magnitude of the association between thera-
                                                                                                                     peutic intervention studies as compared with control studies can be evaluated. For
                                                                                                                     example, a number of decades ago, Smith and Glass (1977) reviewed hundreds of
                                                                                                                     psychotherapy outcome studies and reported that the average person receiving therapy
                                                                                                                     fared better than 75% of untreated controls, with a demonstrably large effect size.
                                                                                                                     Eighty-three percent of those treated were better off than controls, especially for the
                                                                                                                     alleviation of anxiety and the improvement of self-esteem. Such findings are consistently
                                                                                                                     maintained across a wide range of disorders, excluding such biologically based distur-
                                                                                                                     bances as bipolar disorder and the schizophrenias, where psychoactive medications are
                                                                                                                     primary. Recently Lambert (2004), summarizing research on the effectiveness of psycho-
                                                                                                                     therapy, reported,
                                                                                                                           For the most part, psychological interventions surpass the effects of medication for psycho-
                                                                                                                           logical disorders and should be offered prior to medications (except with the most severely
                                                                                                                           disturbed patients) because they are less dangerous and less intrusive, or at the very least, in
                                                                                                                           addition to medications because they reduce the likelihood of relapse once medication is
                                                                                                                           withdrawn (Elkin, 1994; Thase, 1999).
                                                                                                                         In addition, researchers are addressing the process of therapy and reporting that the
                                                                                                                     therapist, and especially one who is experienced and flexible in responsiveness, is a central
                                                                                                                     element of change and that the therapeutic relationship accounts for most of the outcome
                                                                                                                     variance (Norcross, 2000; Orlinsky, Grawe, & Parks, 1994). This is such a pronounced
                                                                                                                     finding that nondynamic treatments have incorporated the concept of transference, al-
                                                                                                                     though not using this language, when developing their more cognitively oriented tech-
                                                                                                                     niques (Henry, 1998). Even in an exclusive physician–patient relationship, those doctors
                                                                                                                     who are involved with their patients, demonstrating rapport and responsiveness, offer the
                                                                                                                     increased likelihood that their patients will take their medication and will respond
                                                                                                                                                             BRIEF REPORT                                        309
                                                                                                                     positively to it. Across different kinds of therapies, technique accounts for 12%–15% of
                                                                                                                     the variance (Lambert, 1992; Norcross, 2000). Follow-up data for patients engaged in the
                                                                                                                     therapeutic process for both mental and physical ailments demonstrate that few people
                                                                                                                     suffer a relapse after psychotherapy as compared with those only on medication (Hollon,
                                                                                                                     1996; Hollon, Thase, & Markowitz, 2002). Evidence now shows that psychotherapy is
                                                                                                                     cost effective. Not only does it demonstrate an improvement in general well-being, but it
                                                                                                                     also shows an increased effectiveness in work performance, fewer loss-of-work days, and
                                                                                                                     less use of medical services. Such information would be helpful to clinicians as well as to
                                                                                                                     the public at large and to reimbursement agencies (Leuzinger-Bohleber, Stuhr, Rüger, &
                                                                                                                     Beutel, 2003; Sandell et al., 2000; Yates, 1995).
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                                                                                                                     searchers have developed manuals for particular mental disorders and, with randomized
                                                                                                                     controlled trials, have tested them against control groups and have found their clinical
                                                                                                                     approach helpful in curtailing particular symptoms. They now have become advocates of
                                                                                                                     this approach, challenging clinicians to abandon therapeutic approaches that have not been
                                                                                                                     empirically tested. Some, according to Bohart (2003), have gone so far as to suggest that
                                                                                                                     the nonuse of this approach amounts to unethical practice.
                                                                                                                          Manualized specific intervention has serious limitations (see Westen, Novotny, &
                                                                                                                     Thompson-Brenner, 2004, for a thorough review), although its practitioners have labeled
                                                                                                                     it the “gold standard” for psychotherapy research. Participants are carefully screened so
                                                                                                                     that they demonstrate one variable, the particular symptom under study. Such constancy,
                                                                                                                     of course, is a useful research tool in that it permits the establishment of causal inferences
                                                                                                                     (use of this manualized substitute testing will produce a clear outcome). Bohart (2000), a
                                                                                                                     critic of this approach, suggests it is too closely based on a medical model, analogous to
                                                                                                                     the quest for establishing a specific treatment (identified by the purity of the drug) that will
                                                                                                                     allow for specific outcome effects. A pure ingredient (an interpretation, for example)
                                                                                                                     cannot be assumed in psychotherapy, because it always exists in the context of the
                                                                                                                     therapeutic relationship. Wampold (2001) stated, “a cognitive– behavioral advocate is
                                                                                                                     interested in how cognitive schemas are altered and how this alteration is beneficial and
                                                                                                                     is relatively uninterested with incidental aspects, such as the therapeutic relationships and
                                                                                                                     their effects” (p. 16). He has carefully studied the trend toward manualization in psycho-
                                                                                                                     therapy research, and he contends that behavioral and cognitive– behavioral treatments
                                                                                                                     and their more limited, specific focus are more easily put into manual form than
                                                                                                                     psychodynamic treatments. The trials are short, typically 6 to 12 sessions, with no
                                                                                                                     follow-up over a period of time to ensure remission. The approach has little to do with the
                                                                                                                     patients who clinicians usually see in treatment, that is, those with multiple symptoms,
                                                                                                                     maladaptive behaviors, and serious character disorders—the messy world of real patients.
                                                                                                                     What is overlooked in a manualized treatment approach is that even if the technique or
                                                                                                                     type of therapy is a significant source of change, it eliminates from consideration the
                                                                                                                     important fact of variability in efficacy of individual therapists within the same treatment
                                                                                                                     condition. Some therapists are effective; others are less so (Crits-Christoph & Mintz,
                                                                                                                     1991). As the above suggests, experimentalists using this approach rely on the premise
                                                                                                                     that it is specific treatments rather than common factors such as the relationship or the
                                                                                                                     therapist that are the key to successful outcome. In addition, the use of a manual for each
                                                                                                                     specific type of disorder would require the mastery of hundreds of manuals, an untenable
                                                                                                                     prospect for therapists (Beutler, 2000b).
                                                                                                                          Although such randomized clinical trials with single-symptom populations may be
                                                                                                                     efficacious for particular groups of patients (e.g., those with anxiety and panic disorders
                                                                                                                     [Barlow, 2002], agoraphobia, and smoking and drinking problems [Atkins & Di Guiseppi,
                                                                                                                     310                                       BRIEF REPORT
                                                                                                                     1998]), clinicians and researchers recognize its lack of ecological validity, and thus
                                                                                                                     advocates of manualized treatment have offered a challenge to the rest of us. It has become
                                                                                                                     a wakeup call for clinicians. The president of APA, Ronald Levant, has set up a task force
                                                                                                                     to study this issue and to provide a more appropriate definition for evidence-based
                                                                                                                     practice. The CEO of APA, Norman Anderson, is both a supporter of and participant in
                                                                                                                     this task force. This group is composed of psychotherapy researchers and includes a
                                                                                                                     handful of clinicians as well. I am one of the participants of this group of 20 psychologists.
                                                                                                                     We have met in Washington, DC, for an extended weekend and will meet in a follow-up
                                                                                                                     session with the aim of considering the knowledge areas that inform clinical work and
                                                                                                                     developing recommendations that, with input from governance boards, committees, divi-
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                                                                                                                     sions, and the states, will ultimately be synthesized into a statement that APA can endorse
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                                                                                                                     and disseminate.
                                                                                                                          As part of the thinking of this task force, we take for granted that as psychologists we
                                                                                                                     employ a scientist–practitioner model and that we use empirical research and scholarship
                                                                                                                     to inform our clinical work. We have a sizable body of evidence based on different
                                                                                                                     research methods (e.g., effectiveness studies, process outcome studies, systematic case
                                                                                                                     studies, and single-participant experimental designs). We value our clinical expertise,
                                                                                                                     which includes our experience, judgment, relational skills, critical thinking and listening,
                                                                                                                     assessment, and decision making, as well as our flexibility, our ability to engage in a fluid
                                                                                                                     dyadic field that is often ambiguous, and our capacity to vary our interventions when
                                                                                                                     appropriate and to monitor progress. We consider, as well, the unique personality of the
                                                                                                                     patient, including his or her special psychological problems, social characteristics, and
                                                                                                                     cultural context, as well as the individual’s goals and values. Our current task force is
                                                                                                                     using these features of our understanding of clinical practice to refine our definition so that
                                                                                                                     it reflects our current knowledge and judgment about improving the health and well-being
                                                                                                                     of the public.
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