Publication | Closed Access
Who (or What) Can Do Psychotherapy: The Status and Challenge of Nonprofessional Therapies
318
Citations
31
References
1994
Year
PsychotherapyFamily MedicineParaprofessional TherapistsDifferent Professional TherapiesMental HealthClinical TreatmentPsychologySocial SciencesPrimary CareClinical PsychologyTherapeutic RelationshipCognitive TherapyProfessional TherapyEvidence-based TherapyPsychiatryNonprofessional TherapiesOutcomes ResearchClinical Counseling TheoriesCounselling PsychologyIndividual TherapyNursingMedicinePsychopathology
Research suggests that paraprofessional therapists usually produce effects that are greater than effects for control conditions and comparable to those for professional therapist treatment Other nonprofessional psychological treatments, such as self-administered materials and self-help groups, have also demonstrated positive effects Because of the promise of these nonprofessional treatments, their potential for low-cost service delivery, and the important theoretical questions that studies comparing them can answer, psychotherapy outcome research should shift away from comparisons of different professional therapies and instead compare nonprofessional therapies with professional therapy
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