Early response in psychotherapy: Further evidence for the importance of common factors rather than “placebo effects”
- 1 July 2005
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Journal of Clinical Psychology
- Vol. 61 (7) , 855-869
- https://doi.org/10.1002/jclp.20130
Abstract
Evidence is presented demonstrating that placebo control groups benefit more from psychotherapy than no‐treatment control groups but less than patients who receive theory‐driven treatments. Through a brief review of the results of comparative outcome studies, studies which compare patient outcomes for those seen by trainees or paraprofessionals versus professional therapists and those which show an early response of a sizable portion of patients, a case is made for the powerful effects of common factors in psychotherapy. The early response phenomenon has proposed another challenge to the unique effects of specific psychotherapies and to the wisdom of emphasizing the causative effects of specific techniques in the treatment of specific disorders. © 2005 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Clin Psychol 61: 855–869, 2005.Keywords
This publication has 37 references indexed in Scilit:
- Identification of Empirically Supported Counseling Psychology InterventionsThe Counseling Psychologist, 2002
- Psychotherapy quality control: the statistical generation of expected recovery curves for integration into an early warning systemClinical Psychology & Psychotherapy, 2001
- Empirically Supported Psychological Interventions: Controversies and EvidenceAnnual Review of Psychology, 2001
- On the impossibility of placebo effects in psychotherapyPhilosophical Psychology, 1998
- Improvement after evaluation in psychotherapy of depression: Evidence of a placebo effect?Journal of Clinical Psychology, 1989
- Psychological treatment versus nonspecific factors: A meta-analysis of conditions that engender comparable expectations for improvementClinical Psychology Review, 1988
- Relative contribution of specific and nonspecific treatment effects: Meta-analysis of placebo-controlled behavior therapy research.Psychological Bulletin, 1988
- The Placebo in Psychosocial Outcome EvaluationsEvaluation & the Health Professions, 1986
- The placebo: Conceptual analysis of a construct in transition.American Psychologist, 1984
- Comparative effectiveness of paraprofessional and professional helpers.Psychological Bulletin, 1979