Society for the Advancement of Psychotherapy

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psychotherapy articles

Articles tagged "psychotherapy articles".

816 articles

Psychotherapy
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Psychotherapy

It’s the year 2068 and a client is seeking therapy. What will this process look like? What will psychotherapy look like? Will it be completely unrecognizable? As I reflect on the future of psychotherapy, I feel simultaneously exhilarated and terrified about the future of our field. Will people continue to seek therapy through internet research, […]

Cara Jacobson, Psy.D.

Cara Jacobson, Psy.D.

May 4, 2018

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

Meet Your Newest Publications Board Member
Society News

Meet Your Newest Publications Board Member

Terence J. G. Tracey is an academic nomad, having received his BA at Cornell university in 1974, his master’s at University of Kansas in 1977 and his PhD from the University of Maryland, College Park, in 1981. He then was employed as a Counseling Psychologist at the University Counseling Service at the State University of […]

Terence J. G. Tracey, Ph.D., ABPP

Terence J. G. Tracey, Ph.D., ABPP

May 4, 2018

Ripple Effects
Advocacy+2 more

Ripple Effects

The day after the 2016 election dawned cloudy and rainy in Washington, DC. As I awoke from a few hours of fitful sleep to drive to work, I felt shocked, disoriented, and confused. The long election season had intensified political divisions, information silos, alternate worldviews, extreme partisan attacks, and disrespect and disgust for the other […]

David B. Sacks, Psy.D., ABPP

David B. Sacks, Psy.D., ABPP

May 4, 2018

Making Psychotherapy Scalable by Teaching Nonprofessionals to Deliver Treatment to Each Other
Assessment & Treatment+1 more

Making Psychotherapy Scalable by Teaching Nonprofessionals to Deliver Treatment to Each Other

Decades of psychotherapy outcome research and countless meta-analyses show that psychotherapy works. Unfortunately, psychotherapy is a luxury afforded to few. Only a minority of people with mental illness receive treatment (Kessler et al., 2005), due to both attitudinal barriers (e.g., stigma, desire for self-reliance) and structural barriers (e.g., cost, provider availability; Mojtabai et al., 2011). […]

Samantha L. Bernecker, M.S. + 1 more

Samantha L. Bernecker, M.S. + 1 more

May 4, 2018

2018 Bulletin Editors’ Column 53(1)
Psychotherapy Electronic Communications Editors' Column

2018 Bulletin Editors’ Column 53(1)

Happy Spring, and welcome to the first issue of Psychotherapy Bulletin for 2018! We would like first thank outgoing Editorial Assistant Dr. Elizabeth Coyle for her excellent service to the Bulletin, and to welcome new Editorial Assistant, Cory Marchi, MA. We would like to wish an especially warm welcome our new Domain Chairs, Representatives, officers, […]

Lynett Henderson Metzger + 1 more

Lynett Henderson Metzger + 1 more

May 4, 2018

Our Esteemed National Leader—Dr. Ronald Fox
Society News

Our Esteemed National Leader—Dr. Ronald Fox

In Remembrance of Dr. Ronald Fox May 11, 1936 – March 14, 2018 Those of us who passionately believe in the mission of Division 29, and the importance of an autonomous psychological profession for the wellbeing of our nation, lost one of our most beloved and visionary leaders with the passing of Ron Fox on […]

Pat DeLeon, Ph.D. + 1 more

Pat DeLeon, Ph.D. + 1 more

April 25, 2018

Is the DSM the Only Way to Diagnose Psychological Troubles?
Assessment & Treatment+1 more

Is the DSM the Only Way to Diagnose Psychological Troubles?

A Proposal of Two Critical Questions for All Psychological Diagnosis I am now publishing a sequence of two books with Lexington Books. The first is A Democratic Mind: Psychiatry and Psychology with Fewer Meds and More Soul, and the second is Psychotherapy for A Democratic Mind: Treatment of Intimacy, Tragedy, Violence and Evil.  Psychotherapy for […]

Israel W Charny, Ph.D.

Israel W Charny, Ph.D.

April 22, 2018

Analyzing Ethical Dilemmas through the Lens of the Television Show Gypsy
Ethics & Legal

Analyzing Ethical Dilemmas through the Lens of the Television Show Gypsy

According to Haeny (2014), psychologists face a plethora of ethical dilemmas when attempting to find a balance between their personal lives and professional lives. In particular, this multitude of challenges present cognitive dissonance in many instances where the line of what is ethically and morally correct is not clear. Specifically, Haeny (2014) proposed that these […]

Heidys Prieto

Heidys Prieto

March 25, 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

Psychotherapy for Pregnancy Loss
Assessment & Treatment

Psychotherapy for Pregnancy Loss

Pregnancy loss is an umbrella term for the death of a conceptus, fetus, or neonate before the 21st day of life and affects a substantial amount of women and their partners. It has been estimated that 20-50% of all pregnancies end in miscarriage, or the loss of a pregnancy before 20 weeks gestation. Moreover, about […]

Rayna D. Markin, Ph.D.

Rayna D. Markin, Ph.D.

January 28, 2018