Society for the Advancement of Psychotherapy

Assessment & Treatment

Focused on the critical aspects of assessment and treatment in psychotherapy, this section offers resources, guidelines, and discussions on effective diagnostic and therapeutic strategies to improve client outcomes.

277 articles found

Transporting Evidence-Based Practices to Public Health Settings
Assessment & Treatment

Transporting Evidence-Based Practices to Public Health Settings

We live in an age when a multitude of effective therapies have been identified, and the call is building for evidence-based practices as “the integration of the best available research with clinical expertise in the context of patient characteristics, culture, and preferences” (American Psychological Association, 2006, p. 273). This focus has accompanied a proliferation of […]

Scott H. Waltman, Psy.D., ABPP + 2 more

Scott H. Waltman, Psy.D., ABPP + 2 more

March 8, 2015

What Do We Know about Psychotherapy?
Assessment & Treatment+1 more

What Do We Know about Psychotherapy?

We have just finished writing the 2nd edition of a book with the title The Great Psychotherapy Debate. Although there are many aspects of psychotherapy about which there is no debate, there remain some important debates about some issues. Interestingly, what we debate probably is not all that important, at one level (although it is […]

Bruce E. Wampold, Ph.D., ABPP + 1 more

Bruce E. Wampold, Ph.D., ABPP + 1 more

March 1, 2015

Preparation for Psychotherapy Through Facilitating Autonomous Motivation
Assessment & Treatment

Preparation for Psychotherapy Through Facilitating Autonomous Motivation

Our study published in Psychotherapy in December 2014 focused on psychotherapy motivation among patients with substance use disorders (SUD) based on Self Determination Theory (SDT; Ryan & Deci, 2000). The study showed that SUD patients’ amotivation predicted increased dropout rate in the step from assessment to starting therapy (Philips & Wennberg, 2014). These results add […]

Björn Philips + 1 more

Björn Philips + 1 more

February 15, 2015

Divorce and Alternative Dispute Resolution
Assessment & Treatment

Divorce and Alternative Dispute Resolution

Psychotherapists are often called on to help families of divorce. It can be to help a couple peacefully disentangle their relationship or help a child cope with the changes in the family. While the courts try to help children and families of divorce, they are limited by statute, the utility of custody evaluations, and the […]

Jeffrey Zimmerman, Ph.D., ABPP

Jeffrey Zimmerman, Ph.D., ABPP

January 18, 2015

Creating Meaning in Treatment
Assessment & Treatment+1 more

Creating Meaning in Treatment

Although not popular or necessarily the easiest tool to utilize, the significant events approach to change process research, as described by Elliot (2010), can provide explanations and causal evidence that other approaches (e.g. process-outcome) may not. Within the significant events approach literature, specific moments within psychotherapy treatment have been identified and analyzed to tie in-session […]

April Krowel, Ph.D.

April Krowel, Ph.D.

January 15, 2015

10 Ways to Improve Psychotherapy Outcome
Assessment & Treatment+1 more

10 Ways to Improve Psychotherapy Outcome

In Laska, Gurman, & Wampold (2014) and Laska & Wampold (2014) I discussed how to improve the quality of mental health care from a common factor (CF) perspective. Unfortunately, one fundamental misunderstanding of CF theory is that “anything goes” and therapists can do whatever they want. Let me be crystal clear, from a CF perspective, […]

Kevin M. Laska, Ph.D.

Kevin M. Laska, Ph.D.

January 4, 2015

Program-Led Guided Self-Help Interventions
Assessment & Treatment

Program-Led Guided Self-Help Interventions

Introduction In the June issue of Psychotherapy, Newman, Przeworski, Consoli, and Taylor present a study on the use of a palmtop computer-assisted therapy for Generalized Anxiety Disorder (GAD) (Newman et al., 2014). This novel evaluation of the efficiency of coupling a computer program with face-to-face Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy (CBT) was the culmination of questions that began […]

Nitya Kanuri, B.A. + 2 more

Nitya Kanuri, B.A. + 2 more

December 18, 2014

Functional Analytic Psychotherapy (FAP)
Assessment & Treatment+1 more

Functional Analytic Psychotherapy (FAP)

Close relationships are central to mental health (Wetterneck & Hart, 2012). Loneliness and poor social connection represent a significant public health concern, increasing risk of death as much as excessive cigarette smoking, more than excessive drinking and obesity (Holt-Lunstad et. al., 2010). Functional Analytic Psychotherapy (FAP) is a contextual, behavioral, relational approach to psychotherapy in […]

Mavis Tsai, Ph.D. + 3 more

Mavis Tsai, Ph.D. + 3 more

December 14, 2014

An Exciting Future by Embracing Change
Assessment & Treatment

An Exciting Future by Embracing Change

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) One of the most vibrant agencies within the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) is CDC, headquartered in Atlanta, Georgia. Since 1946, CDC has served as a public health leader in the U.S. and around the world. It has experts assigned to all 50 states and […]

Pat DeLeon, Ph.D.

Pat DeLeon, Ph.D.

December 11, 2014

Epistemic Trust, Psychopathology and the Great Psychotherapy Debate
Assessment & Treatment+1 more

Epistemic Trust, Psychopathology and the Great Psychotherapy Debate

Over the past decades, meta-analyses have found almost no clinically meaningful differences in efficacy between the various evidence-based psychotherapies. This has led to the formulation of the so-called “Dodo bird verdict”, based on the Alice in Wonderland story, which argues that “all [psychotherapies] have won and all must have prizes”. Consequently, major figures in the […]

Peter Fonagy, Ph.D. + 3 more

Peter Fonagy, Ph.D. + 3 more

December 7, 2014

Psychotherapy for Individuals with Psychopathy/Antisocial Personality Disorder
Assessment & Treatment+1 more

Psychotherapy for Individuals with Psychopathy/Antisocial Personality Disorder

Can Individuals with Psychopathy Be Treated? From its first conceptualization in modern psychiatry, psychopathy has been surrounded with therapeutic pessimism (Cleckley, 1941; D’Silva, Duggan, & McCarthy, 2004; Salekin, Worley, & Grimes, 2010). Psychopathy is a severe form of antisocial personality disorder characterized by a lack of empathy and remorse, self-aggrandizement, a manipulative interpersonal style and […]

Farid Chakhssi, Ph.D. + 2 more

Farid Chakhssi, Ph.D. + 2 more

November 30, 2014

Talking About Race in Trauma Psychotherapy
Assessment & Treatment+1 more

Talking About Race in Trauma Psychotherapy

Imagine that you are working with a client of a different racial background than your own. Should the topic of race be specifically addressed? If it is addressed, how do you go about starting this conversation, and more importantly, how might your therapeutic choices impact the relationship and treatment outcomes? Why Race Matters The ethnic […]

Garrett B. Work, M.A. + 2 more

Garrett B. Work, M.A. + 2 more

November 23, 2014