Society for the Advancement of Psychotherapy

Psychotherapy Process

Explore the dynamics and stages of the psychotherapy process, from the initial client assessment to the therapeutic interventions that promote healing. This section provides insights into the complexities of therapeutic relationships and strategies to enhance treatment effectiveness.

254 articles found

To Share or Not to Share
Psychotherapy Process

To Share or Not to Share

My Confusion About and Interest in Therapist Self-Disclosure (TSD) As I begin to establish my private practice, I have been reflecting on the evolution of my thoughts about and use of therapist self-disclosure (TSD), which I am using here to mean “therapist statements that reveal something personal about the therapist” (Hill & Knox, 2002, p. […]

Kristen G. Pinto-Coelho, Ph.D.

Kristen G. Pinto-Coelho, Ph.D.

May 4, 2018

Teaching and Learning Evidence-Based Relationships
Assessment & Treatment+2 more

Teaching and Learning Evidence-Based Relationships

Introduction The following video series titled, Teaching and Learning Evidence-Based Relationships: Interviews with the Experts is brought to you by The Society for the Advancement of Psychotherapy/APA Division 29 and is a companion project to the third edition of Psychotherapy Relationships that Work. The overall goal of the project is to translate relationship research to teaching and learning, from the […]

Rayna D. Markin, Ph.D. + 1 more

Rayna D. Markin, Ph.D. + 1 more

March 15, 2018

Caucasian Therapist Self-Disclosure to Cultural Minority Clients
Diversity+1 more

Caucasian Therapist Self-Disclosure to Cultural Minority Clients

In offering further commentary to the article on Caucasian therapist self-disclosure to cultural minority populations, it is important to begin by more generally acknowledging both individual and between group differences. This is an important beginning because aspects of cultural competency are so often avoided as a larger subject through the statement ‘everyone is different.’ While […]

Graham Danzer, Psy.D.

Graham Danzer, Psy.D.

March 11, 2018

The Role of Therapists Crying in Therapy
Article & Book Reviews+2 more

The Role of Therapists Crying in Therapy

An important aspect of psychotherapy is the therapist’s reactions to his or her client during session (Kahn & Fromm, 2001; Summers & Barber, 2010). One type of emotional expression that has garnered interest throughout the psychological literature is the phenomenon of therapists crying with their patients (McWilliams, 1994; Alden, 2001; Summers & Barber, 2010; Guntrip, […]

Taylor Rodriguez, B.S. + 1 more

Taylor Rodriguez, B.S. + 1 more

January 14, 2018

A Call for “Negotiation” in the Termination Process
Psychotherapy Process+1 more

A Call for “Negotiation” in the Termination Process

Psychotherapy termination is that moment in which therapists and clients say goodbye (or “call me if you need me”). As part of the first author’s doctoral dissertation, we conducted a research study in which we asked former clients about their treatment. Surprisingly, when clients were asked about their treatment, many started the recount by addressing […]

Julieta Olivera + 2 more

Julieta Olivera + 2 more

January 7, 2018

Microaggressions in Psychotherapy
Assessment & Treatment+2 more

Microaggressions in Psychotherapy

Microaggressions have been linked to reductions in psychological and physical health (Sue, 2010). The term racial microaggression is a term first utilized by Pierce (1970) to describe the subtle, jarring, typically automatic or unconscious, verbal and nonverbal exchanges; often perceived as understated, insulting “put downs” directed at people of color. Sue et al. (2007) did […]

TaShara D. Williams, M.A. + 2 more

TaShara D. Williams, M.A. + 2 more

December 30, 2017

Navigating the Minefield of Politics in the Therapy Session
Diversity+2 more

Navigating the Minefield of Politics in the Therapy Session

If, indeed, the personal is political and the political is personal, where does that leave psychotherapists—whose profession is intensely personal—when clients voice strong political views counter to ours or when their political stress resonates with our own sense of a rending of the civic and cultural fabric of the country? In the aftermath of one […]

Patricia T. Spangler, Ph.D. + 3 more

Patricia T. Spangler, Ph.D. + 3 more

December 30, 2017

Paying Attention to the Details
Psychotherapy Process

Paying Attention to the Details

The past 100 years of psychotherapy research has sought not only to examine the efficacy and effectiveness of psychotherapy, but also to identify the causal mechanisms and processes underlying therapeutic change (Lambert, 2013; Wampold & Imel, 2015). The existing research on psychotherapy processes has provided us with a rich understanding of several variables that are […]

Joshua K. Swift, Ph.D.

Joshua K. Swift, Ph.D.

November 6, 2017

What You Don’t Know Might Hurt You
Assessment & Treatment+1 more

What You Don’t Know Might Hurt You

Clients request, question, or reject information related to their diagnoses at various times, and in a myriad of ways (e.g., “My partner says I have Borderline Personality Disorder, do I?”, “My mood is all over the place! Do you think I’m bipolar?”, “Maybe it’s ADHD?”). At intake, clients seek clarification of the nature of their […]

Sara Beth Austin, M.A. + 1 more

Sara Beth Austin, M.A. + 1 more

August 6, 2017

Facilitate Memorable Terminations
Psychotherapy Process+1 more

Facilitate Memorable Terminations

Facilitate Memorable Terminations with Awareness, Courage and Love Functional Analytic Psychotherapy (FAP), a contemporary contextual behavioral therapy grounded in empirically supported principles, harnesses the power of the therapeutic relationship and maximizes the therapist’s genuineness, compassion and effectiveness. FAP focuses on how therapists can notice and respond effectively to client daily-life problems when they also occur […]

Holly Yates, M.S., LPC + 3 more

Holly Yates, M.S., LPC + 3 more

July 30, 2017

Addressing and Managing Resistance with Internalizing Clients
Psychotherapy Process

Addressing and Managing Resistance with Internalizing Clients

Sigmund Freud originally described psychological resistance as a phenomenon wherein patients unconsciously “cling to their disease” through “tenacious” and “critical objections” in order to repress distressing thoughts, emotions and experiences as they are raised by the therapist (Freud, 1904; 1920; 1940). This understanding—a somewhat patronizing view that pitted expert doctor against oblivious patient—persisted in the […]

Sara Beth Austin, M.A. + 1 more

Sara Beth Austin, M.A. + 1 more

June 18, 2017

Ending Therapy
Psychotherapy Process+1 more

Ending Therapy

Termination of the Therapy Relationship As with all relationships, a therapeutic relationship has a beginning and an end. The end of a therapeutic relationship often offers an opportunity for the therapist and client to engage in the termination process, which can include looking back on the course of treatment, helping the client plan ahead and […]

Avantika Bhatia, Ph.D.

Avantika Bhatia, Ph.D.

June 11, 2017