560 Chapter
16
Treatment of Psychological Disorders
getting to sleep, and—this is what really bothers him—has begun to think that peo-
ple are ganging up on him, talking about him behind his back. It seems that no one
really cares about or understands him or makes any effort to see why he’s become
so miserable.
Ben knows that he ought to get
some kind of help, but he is not sure where to
turn. He is fairly skeptical of psychologists and thinks that a lot of what they say
is just mumbo-jumbo, but he’s willing to put his doubts aside and try anything to
feel better. He also knows there are many
different types of therapy, and he doesn’t
have a clue about which would be best for him. He turns to you for advice because
he knows you are taking a psychology course. He asks, “Which kind of therapy
works best?”
IS THERAPY EFFECTIVE?
This question requires a complex response. In fact, identifying the single most appro-
priate form of treatment is a controversial and still unresolved task for psychologists
specializing in psychological disorders. In fact, even before considering whether one
form of therapy
works better than another, we need to determine whether therapy
in any form effectively alleviates psychological disturbances.
Until the 1950s, most people simply assumed that therapy was effective. But in
1952 psychologist Hans Eysenck published an infl uential study challenging that
assumption. He claimed that people who received psychodynamic treatment and
related therapies were no better off at the end of treatment
than were people who
were placed on a waiting list for treatment but never received it. Eysenck concluded
that people would go into
spontaneous remission, recovery without treatment, if
they were simply left alone—certainly a cheaper and simpler process.
Although other psychologists quickly challenged Eysenck’s
conclusions, his
review stimulated a continuing stream of better controlled, more carefully crafted
studies on the effectiveness of psychotherapy. Today most psychologists agree: Ther-
apy does work. Several comprehensive reviews indicate that therapy brings about
greater improvement than no treatment at all, with the
rate of spontaneous remis-
sion being fairly low. In most cases, then, the symptoms of abnormal behavior do
not go away by themselves if left untreated—although the issue continues to be
hotly debated (Seligman, 1996; Westen, Novotny, & Thompson-Brenner, 2004; Lutz
et al., 2006).
Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: