The evolution of psychotherapy. How change happens : what the world's literature on the mediators of therapeutic change can teach us / Steven C. Hayes, Joseph Ciarrochi, Stefan G. Hofmann, Frederick T. Chin, Sahdra Baljinder ; HMP Global.

Over the last four decades, evidence-based psychotherapy has been forced into a syndromal box. We have learned some useful things from the "protocols for syndromes" era, but most agree that the end result is inadequate and further progress has slowed to a crawl. Practitioners do not get wh...

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Bibliographic Details
Online Access: Streaming Video (via Alexander Street Press)
Main Author: Hayes, Steven C. (Author)
Other title:Evolution of psychotherapy : the official meeting of the Milton H. Erickson Foundation : 2020 virtual experience.
Evolution of psychotherapy : 2020 virtual experience.
Format: Video
Language:English
Published: Phoenix, AZ : Milton H. Erickson Foundation, 2020.
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Summary:Over the last four decades, evidence-based psychotherapy has been forced into a syndromal box. We have learned some useful things from the "protocols for syndromes" era, but most agree that the end result is inadequate and further progress has slowed to a crawl. Practitioners do not get what they need from research, treatment is difficult to individualize, and processes of change are poorly understood. In this talk I will show why evidence-based treatment is moving rapidly toward a process-based therapy model, and I will describe the profound impact that change is having clinically and methodologically. I will present the preliminary findings of a multi-year long attempt to review the mediational evidence for the entire world's literature on psychological intervention, conducted with my colleagues Stefan Hofmann (Boston University) and Joseph Ciarrochi (Australian Catholic University). Over 110,000 ratings later, a picture is forming about what we now know about how change happens. In this talk I will share the highlight from those data and integrate what we know into a single multi-dimensional multi-level extended evolutionary meta-model (EEMM). The EEMM suggests how a new form of functional analysis is within arms reach and how it can provide a diagnostic alternative to the DSM that has good conceptual and treatment utility. The implications of this approach for the future of our field will be explored. Co-presenters: Stefan G. Hofmann and Joseph Ciarrochi.
Item Description:Title from title screen (viewed October 25, 2021)
"The official meeting of the Milton H. Erickson Foundation : 2020 virtual experience"
"2020 virtual experience"
Physical Description:1 online resource (64 minutes)
Playing Time:01:03:38