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Empirically Supported Treatments: the Deconstruction of a Myth
David N. Elkins
Pepperdine University, Graduate School of Education and Psychology, 6100 Center Dr., Los Angeles, CA 90045, davidnelkins@ hotmail.com
This article summarizes recent findings from analyses and meta-analyses of psychotherapy research that show that so-called empirically supported treatments (ESTs) are no more effective than are traditional psychotherapies. In addition, the findings show that specific modalities and techniques have little, if anything at all, to do with therapeutic benefits and that client improvement and therapeutic outcome are instead the result of other factors in the therapeutic situation such as the alliance, the therapist, the relationship, and other contextual factors. The article shows how these findings deconstruct the whole notion of ESTs and make the current debate about them meaningless. Finally, the article discusses implications of the findings and urges humanistic psychologists and other proponents of traditional psychotherapies to shift the debate away from modalities and techniques and to focus on the factors that are actually responsible for therapeutic benefits.
Key Words: psychotherapy treatment empirical evidence contextual
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This version was published on October
1, 2007
Journal of Humanistic Psychology, Vol. 47, No. 4,
474-500 (2007)
DOI: 10.1177/0022167807302003

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