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The effectiveness of psychotherapy.

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The article was published on 1994-01-01 and is currently open access. It has received 1098 citations till now.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Evidence based psychotherapy: special case or special pleading?

TL;DR: The National Health Service in England has so far resisted this approach, arguing for a broader model of evidence based practice that includes both efficacy and effectiveness evidence, acknowledges the role of factors common to all therapies, and emphasises quality of service delivery.
Journal ArticleDOI

Student experiences in a personal development group: the question of safety

TL;DR: Payne 1996a as mentioned in this paper explored the impact of dance movement therapy (DMT) groups on participants' experiences in their clinical practice with DMT groups following their training, focusing on safety.
Journal ArticleDOI

Outcomes, Guidelines, and Manuals: On Leading Horses to Water

TL;DR: Those developing manual-based psychotherapies must heed the advice of Addis et al. regarding the need to take practitioner concerns seriously and increased attention to the reasons for this reluctance will improve practitioner receptivity to these clinical resources.
Dissertation

Trauma Therapists in Israel: A Qualitative Study into Personal, Familial and Societal Sources of A Priori Countertransference

Y. Tauber
TL;DR: In this article, the life stories of participating trauma therapists and forty years of an English language professional journal, published in Israel, have been analyzed in order to uncover and map personal, familial and societal factors that may contribute to a priori countertransference.
Journal ArticleDOI

Client Perspectives on what Contributes to Symptom Relief in Psychotherapy: A Qualitative Outcome Study:

TL;DR: In this paper, a qualitative study explored the lived experience of symptom relief in psychotherapy as perceived by client participants and treated their subjective accounts as credible data, and conducted in-depth interviews with three participants who experienced symptom relief during the course of psychotherapy.