Common Factors
Common Factors
Common Factors
Barry L. Duncan
for her invaluable comments on this paper, and Tracy Mullendore and
Abstract
amazing discovery was made: Saul Rosenzweig is not only alive, but also
still contributing to science and society at age 93. This article sets
from his passion for literature to his 1965 Buick Skylark, from the
article and not much of anything else about common factors until the
middle 50’s. Trying to make sense of the nearly 20 year hiatus as well
about common factors to him (Hubble, Duncan, & Miller, 1999) to honor
He wrote the first known proposal for common factors at the ripe
old age of 29 (see appendix 1 for a brief biography). This 1932 Harvard
Ph.D. and schoolmate of B.F. Skinner and Jerome Frank, did indeed
and his New York Times acclaimed analyses of Freud’s visit to the
Luborsky (1995) honors Rosenzweig, saying that the 1936 paper “deserves
in many places, most notably on those who are often credited by later
topics ranging from his passion for literature to his 1965 Buick
ideas.
potent implicit common factors, perhaps more important than the methods
important with patients, between what they tell us and what they do, we
vary with the age, problems and potentialities of the individual client
Although these points alone make the article well worth the read
some further elaboration, and Carl Rogers, yes, Carl Rogers, presented
Rosenzweig’s work. Sollod (1981) also notes that the 1940 panel
Not much else was said about common factors until an interesting
suggested that theory and technique are less important than the
reiterates the 1940 panel’s assertions and has since gained much
Rosenzweig said:
The Dodo Bird 8
several different therapies may not have much more in common than
perspective, but credits Heine (1953) and Rogers (1942) for the
article did not reference Rosenzweig. Given the impact of Rogers’ 1957
article.
symphony. Frank’s (1961) book, Persuasion and Healing, was the first
In this and later editions (1973; 1991), Frank placed therapy within
(joined by his daughter, Julia, in the last edition) looked for the
factors.
both patient and therapist and that is believed by both to be the means
reference both Rogers (1942) and Heine (1953) in the 1961 edition.
Morris, 1978). The 70’s also ushered a more refined definition of the
Strupp & Hadley, 1979), and the empirical confirmation of yet another
Luborsky, 1975).
St. Louis on October 12, 2000. Segments of some of his papers are
Washington University, and concluded back in his study over wine and
nuts in the delightful company of his wife Louise and assistant, Amy
come out here and talk with you. I must have sounded wacky when I
called you. Here I am working on this article about your work, and it
Saul Rosenzweig (SR): You thought I might have been in the other
world, huh?
BD: Yes.
BD: So here I was using you as a literary device and all along I
SR: How did you discover that I was still alive and going?
BD: Well I am so glad that you did, because I would have been
forever embarrassed about writing about you and not talking to you. So
Who or what inspired you to think about or write about implicit common
factors? Did you have a professor, or someone that you had discussed
SR: That’s a good place to start. Did you notice the wall hanging
there? I knew that I was going to show you that, but I didn’t realize
became a research associate at the clinic with Dr. Henry Murray. You
BD: Yes.
SR: She was the one that really created the TAT. And, of course, it was
worldwide. Most people know me by that test. I actually don’t like the
term ‘test.’ I call it ‘study’ because I think ‘test’ implies right and
wrong answers. Study is much more the way in which the projective
inspiration for that came from Galton, who introduced word association.
have all of the first editions of all of his books. Anyway, at the
was an associate of the clinic, and as revealed later, she was really
BD: Oh really?
SR: There’s a book about that. Do you know about that book?
BD: No.
SR: It’s called Love’s Story Told by Robinson and that is really the
there’s another book about her and that’s called, Translate This
Christiana Morgan. She was a colleague of mine at the clinic and she
had a hand in this wall hanging. There are some red places in between
the pictures, red vermilion. She painted those vermilion red spots. I
my career, and so that’s why I did it. It begins at the left of the top
row and goes this way, starting with the Hindu god of the mind, Indra,
resurrecting a young boy. And then there are symbols of the elements,
air, fire, water, and earth. That’s in between that picture and the
next one, which is the Zodiac man, painted by Brown in 1470, taken from
library at Harvard, from the rare book room. Then I had the border,
clinic, there was a patient in occupational therapy. His name was John.
He was the one who did the framing of those pictures in the glass. It
BD: Yes.
SR: I was architect, the designer of it, John did the framing of the
pictures and I did all the research of course, and Christiana Morgan
did the vermilions, and this young man whose name I have forgotten, did
the carvings. So as they say, the whole story is here and it goes on
from the Zodiac Man, which of course, was used as a way of guiding
astrologers, and so the Zodiac man was important to them. The third one
Aesculapius was the god of health and medicine. People used to sleep in
this temple in Greece and they had dreams. And the priests would stay
in this temple while they would sleep and when they would wake, he
The Dodo Bird 15
France, applying the royal touch for the cure of diseases. The royal
touch was a very famous method, used not only by King Louis X of
France, but by others as well. And then there’s Jesus, the fifth one,
one is the Egyptian goddess Isis and her son Horus. Isis restored her
son to health from a fatal disease. That one is from a book called,
Evil Eye. And then the last one at the top is of an American Indian, a
animal magnetism. And that shows him with a subject at a séance, who
had been hypnotized or mesmerized. The people would sit around holding
comes Pinel, the famous man of France, removing the chains from the
insane at the Bicetre. And the next one is the revolving chair for
treating the insane. Darwin and Cox invented this in the early 19th
medicine. And then the next is an amulet, for overcoming the evil eye,
Saul. The biblical story is that Saul was a man of moods and
melancholia and David played music, which soothed him. That was the
hospitals. And then the last one is of course, the etching by Max
with Murray and Morgan. I had an office between Murray and Morgan. I
don’t know why they gave me such a special location. But the common
methods trying to reach the mind and doing mental tricks of various
kinds--like the evil eye, the royal touch, the revolving chair, and so
BD: But largely it arose from your interest in history. Through your
of common factors.
this. That certainly had a lot to do with it. That combined with my own
BD: I am very curious about how you came up with the quote from Alice
originally invoked the dodo bird judgement, even though Luborsky says
The Dodo Bird 17
in his article in the second line that you did. I hope this interview
SR: Yes, well, Luborsky called it the ‘dodo verdict.’ That’s what he
said, what he did invent. But it was taken from ‘Some Implicit Common
Factors.’
BD: Oh.
SR: And Edward Lea, in fact, I have a very special collection of Edward
Lea’s first editions. Edward Lea and Lewis Carroll are the two founders
mathematics at Oxford and his real name was Charles Dodgson. And he
also wrote The Looking Glass, and Hunting of the Snark. I was very
literature. So that’s how I knew that material inside and out, and the
BD: Yes, it sure did. So the dodo bird came from your avid interest in
literature.
creativity. In fact the foundation which I started a few years ago, the
has grown from that interest. I have analyzed, via my idiodynamics, the
The Dodo Bird 18
work of the Henry James Sr. family, Dodgson, and even Freud. Because
SR: Very persuasive and very ingenious, and not understood. I don’t
mean that he’s misunderstood, but that he’s just not understood…Well,
it’s time for lunch, but it is too late to call a cab, so I will drive.
BD: Okay, sure… (Arriving at the car) Wow, this is a quite a car. My
son Jesse has a 69 Ford Falcon—he would love this. What year is it?
BD: Indeed they don’t… (Continuing interview) So, what I would like to
do at this point is start with the 1936 paper and follow the trail of
your thinking from there. I thought at first that the common factors
article just stood by itself, that you did nothing else with that
paper. But the more I investigated the more I saw that was a
misconception I had formed from only seeing the 1936 article referenced
edition.
SR: Oh sure, that’s natural, with a first edition. Happens all the
time. You always find new things after you have gone to print. I want
a start of a process that never stopped for me, that took me to many
different places.
The Dodo Bird 19
BD: I will do my best to do so and you can look at this and make sure I
conveyed your process appropriately. So after the ’36 paper, what was
the reaction?
SR: Well, I’ll tell you a story that characterizes a lot of the
of the journal in his hand, and said only “Fools rush in where angels
held.
Pattern.’ You seem to take a different angle but in the same direction.
BD: In the ‘Schools’ paper, you make a strong case for a relatively
one to avoid controversy, you also said, “…schools have been committing
intended and for which they are not really adequate.” You sound like an
journal that this interview will appear in. That article has great
complementarity.
BD: Sure.
but I didn’t use that term until ’51. Actually the first form of
experimentee (Rosenzwieg, 1933). The 1936 paper was the second type,
and the ‘Schools’ paper was yet another. The ‘Schools’ paper showed
the problem emphasized. When I wrote that paper, Neals Bohr, the
Bohrs not only appeared in the same year, but in the same journal as
mine did (The Journal of Philosophy)! And probably for that reason I
got a letter from Tolman, not the famous psychologist Edward Tolman,
but his brother, who was a physicist and dean of the California
Institute of Technology. And out of the blue one day, while I was still
Richard was the brother of the famous Edward Tolman, and he makes that
joke there in the very beginning, you see? I just prize this letter…
SR: Goodwin Watson organized it. I didn’t feel that it was a highly
BD: Watson was the chairperson, he wrote the summary at the end. That
panel is all but forgotten. You know that two of the three references I
found to it, Carl Rogers is not even mentioned, and in one of the
references, you are not mentioned. So how could that get by?
SR: Yes, yes. Things fall through the cracks often, only to resurface
later.
SR: Oh yes, I remember her. She was, I think, the wife of, or at least
SR: Frederick Allen was a Rankian. Rank was an important figure. Allen
BD: You elaborated on some things that I found very interesting: the
importance of the faith of the client in the therapist and the method,
and the notion of fitness. You actually said in that outline that the
factors and that it actually had more to do with the fitness for a
integration.
SR: Yes, yes, and that actually was one of the conclusions of the
of traits but also of the unique history, and the dynamic development
BD: Do you recall your interactions with Carl Rogers? Rogers gives a
SR: Yes, I remember one time when I visited at his invitation, he was
in Chicago at the time and I gave a talk. I think at that time I was at
have been like 1945. And he had a seminar group and he invited me to
BD: Rogers referenced you and the panel in his 1942 book, his first
that your view of common factors were an influence on him, and perhaps
SR: Oh yeah, he was interested in those ideas and really kept up with
the literature.
BD: I was wondering if there were any conversations that you remember
SR: Well I don’t remember any specifically, but when I visited him in
Chicago there must have been. I can’t imagine that we didn’t talk about
that because of his interest in the ’36 paper and our collaboration in
the 1940 panel. That had a lot to do with my having been invited.
BD: Another interesting thing you said in that panel presentation was
BD: Yes. So you moved on from there and laid more groundwork for
new projects, taking your ideas to the next level, and expanding into
literature.
SR: Yes, that’s accurate. There actually was a couple of other common
BD: (BD has since read that paper) In that paper you say, ‘When one is
part and among these there may be more that is common than different.’
You elaborate, like your 1940 panel presentation, more on the faith of
the client in the therapist and emphasize the importance of not only
indeed.
The Dodo Bird 24
in 1949, and that’s why they were interested in another book. I sent it
in and a few months later I decided that it wasn’t good enough and I
BD: Well you went on to the next thing and didn’t want to go back.
SR: That’s it, that’s exactly it. To me, by the time I got to the next
BD: That book, ‘Facets of Psychotherapy,’ would have predated all the
famous books about common factors, like Jerome Frank’s, which came out
in ’61. Your ideas got picked up a couple of decades later, and then
SR: Yes, yes. Well, that is the way it works. And I became very
The basic notion is that these events when viewed in their entirety
about Henry James. In his story, The Death of the Lion, he mentions the
is one way that I got out of the common factors, I became interested in
The Dodo Bird 25
James in particular, but have also studied the whole family and have
James family, all the first editions of Henry James, as well as William
James, the father, which are really pretty rare. Idiodynamics was
himself. I reread all of Freud and studied his dreams. There were about
from where he left off. Freud refers to the same dream in a number of
places in the book. So I put together all of these in one section. Each
And so he was one of the figures. But I also did this with the James,
year. And at that time, each one wrote their masterpiece. Moby Dick was
written at that time by Melville and Hawthorne was working on The House
of Seven Gables, which was his favorite book. And both of those books
book about their association, when they were at ‘the zenith,’ which I
call it--the height of their creativity and when they produced their
president but he gave Hawthorne a well paying job that Hawthorne needed
idiodynamics… (Break for wine and nuts with Mrs. Louise Rosenzweig and
BD: So one thing that I am painting here, and I realize that it’s me
doing the painting, is that all the common factors roads lead back to
you in some way or another. I don’t know if you are familiar with the
trivia game about Kevin Bacon, the actor. This is kind of silly, so
bear with me. The game is called ‘6 degrees of Kevin Bacon.’ The theme
of the game is to trace any actor to a movie with Kevin Bacon within 6
connections. For example, the actress Joan Allen, in the movie, ‘The
‘Murder in the First’ with Kevin Bacon. The theory is that Kevin Bacon
is the center of the universe and all stretches out from that. (Laughs)
associate with common factors have some connection to you. Like Jerome
Frank.
SR: Yes, I went to Harvard with him and had associations with him.
SR: I presented with Carl Rogers in 1940 and spoke to his group in
1945.
also.
SR: Yes, well actually those things, I mean people interacted but that
BD: True. So the fact that there is a gap in referencing you is not
SR: No, because that is the way that it works. I don’t think that the
many different places. That was different. But I don’t like to stress
that because I don’t know that it’s that important and these people
wound up publishing a lot more on the common factors topic than me. And
a lot of times, people read things and take things in and forget where
BD: Okay, but historically it’s important because it seems that after a
common factors theorists started writing, and saying many things that
you said.
SR: I see. That was true even more so about my first paper, the 1933
which were later explored and developed by Orne and Rosenthal regarding
BD: Okay.
SR: But Rosenthal was very aware of that and called me up about two
years ago on the phone. He said that he was just going to give a speech
award.
SR: Well like I said, it has never really been that important to me,
never has been. Because I had been interested in something else by that
time. By the time someone was not referencing me, I was on to the next
the fact that it’s not cited is not a problem for you. Actually, the
way it seemed to work out is that later theorists referenced those who
had been impacted by your work, missing the connection with your ideas.
It’s fascinating that you wrote two papers in the 30’s that were very
influential, but initially unrecognized, and then people take the ball
and run with it, get credit, and then the field finally starts
recognizing you.
SR: Well often people read something that interests them and then they
forget the source. That’s natural, that’s the way things go. And then
sometimes people don’t cite what came before because it lessens their
own contribution.
SR: To me that’s not true. It’s important to some people to shine. What
is that ’15 minutes of fame,’ Who said that, Warhol? That’s the sort of
SR: Actually, the way the universe evolves and so on, in the end, what
is it about? What will it matter anyway, who said what and when, when I
am dead and buried? Ashes to ashes and dust to dust. My passion lies in
that’s it. It’s like falling in love, it doesn’t last for twenty years,
The Dodo Bird 29
somewhere down the line, someone will pick up on it—if they reference
me fine, if not, that is the way it goes. I doubt if I’ll notice when
A Personal Note
It was a crisp, gorgeous autumn day in St. Louis. The leaves were
just starting to turn. The city was all a flutter because the Cardinals
were hosting the Mets in the National League Championship Series. The
beauty of day, the majesty of the mature trees just tinged with color,
was not only a delightful experience that I will always cherish, but it
When you talk about Saul Rosenzweig, you’re talking about the
Indeed, talking to him was like reading a novel about the history
his charming wife, Louise, and hearing about his current projects all
Dr. Rosenzweig not only taught me about the history of common factors,
resentment toward others achieving far more credit for similar ideas
ideas and their sharing with others. Saul Rosenzweig demonstrated the
held in his honor at Washington University. Many whose lives and work
to the many different fields he has impacted, but rather in his pride
in teaching and inspiring others with his ideas. His work, his life,
and his amazing vitality and productivity offer not only hope of a
References
York: Springer.
York: Macmillan.
York: Springer.
The Dodo Bird 32
Hubble, M.A., Duncan, B.L., & Miller, S.D. (1999). The heart and
psychotherapies the main explanation for the Dodo bird verdict that
Mifflin.
95-103.
415.
The Dodo Bird 33
manuscript.
Stratton.
304.
York: Wiley.
Appendix
1930, the M.A., and in 1932, the Ph.D. in clinical psychology. At the
repression. His first publication appeared in 1933 under the title “The
behavior. It was here that Rosenzwieg wrote his classic paper on common
Carl Rogers.
was the founder and first president; the publication of the much cited
real-life identity of this patient was discovered and the etiology and
including Freud, Jung, and Hall the Kingmaker, a New York Times
Barry L. Duncan
Sparks for invaluable comments on this paper and Roberto Quiroz for
library assistance.
The Dodo Bird 38
Abstract
an ugly fact.
2000a; Duncan & Moynihan, 1994; Duncan, Hubble, & Miller, 1997; Duncan,
Solovey, & Rusk, 1992; Hubble, Duncan, & Miller, 1999a; Miller, Duncan,
& Hubble, 1997), I only recently read Saul Rosenzweig’s classic 1936
long overdue first-hand look, I was more than surprised to find the
Rosenzweig’s paper (see his explanation for that choice in Duncan, this
issue).
tells the story of a race that was run to help the animals dry off
after they were soaked by Alice’s tears. The animals ran off helter
skelter in different directions, and the race was soon stopped. The
dodo bird was asked, “Who has won?” And he finally exclaimed the now
famous verdict, “Everybody has won, and all must have prizes.” The dodo
bird’s pronouncement has become not only a metaphor for the state of
Goldfried & Wolfe, 1998; Hubble, Duncan, & Miller, 1999b; Shapiro,
though, have credited Luborsky, Singer, and Luborsky (1975) for its use
psychotherapy.
in the second line of their own classic piece, most (with notable
1936, presented the classic argument, still used today, for a common
guilty.
of common factors. The paradox inherent to the dodo bird verdict and
in the spirit of Rosenzweig’s legacy and the wisdom of the dodo, this
versions of mental life and therapy. Since those days, the divisions
have multiplied. New schools of therapy now arrive with the regularity
has grown approximately 600% (Miller et al., 1997). Although the actual
The Dodo Bird 42
than 200 therapy models and 400 techniques (Bergin & Garfield, 1994).
inclined to predict that sometime in the next century there will be one
98). Most claim to be the corrective for all that came before,
professing to have the inside line on human motivation, the true causes
As Bergin and Lambert (1978) described this time, “Presumably, the one
that one (or more) therapies would prove superior to others, received
overturn it (see below), the dodo bird verdict still stands. Therapy
comparative studies and reviews of the 70’s and 80’s (e.g., Luborsky et
al., 1975; Smith, Glass, & Miller, 1980; Shapiro & Shapiro, 1982;
outcome, the 80’s gave rise to more prominence to common factors ideas,
Weinberger, 1993).
proposal, Miller et al. (1997) expanded the use of the term “common
Until lions have their historians, tales of hunting will always glorify
the hunter.
African Proverb
(Duncan & Miller, 2000a). Tallman and Bohart’s (1999) review of the
research makes clear, however, that the client is actually the single,
clients bring into the therapy room and what influences their lives
Revisiting the dodo bird verdict, Bohart (2000) decries the field’s
therapies work equally well because they share one very important, but
regenerative powers. The dodo bird verdict rings true, Bohart suggests,
among models.
examples of the equivalence of outcome should occur. And they do. The
widespread uniform results would not be the norm. The data point to the
& Bohart, 1999). Tallman and Bohart’s review strongly suggests that the
field reconsider its infatuation with model and technique and invest
change. Bergin and Garfield (1994) note: “As therapists have depended
more upon the client's resources, more change seems to occur” (pp. 825-
826).
take what therapy offers and make the best of it. First, he argued that
serves to get the process of change started and need not be totally
belief in the client’s capacity for change and the enlistment of the
only has to examine the texts of therapist talk, the countless number
2000a). This common factor suggests that therapists eschew the five D’s
to remember that the purpose is to identify not what clients need, but
what they already have that can be put to use in reaching their goals
recover their health simply through their contentment with the goodness
of the physician.
--Hippocrates
not only been empirically supported, but are also remarkably consistent
Horvath (1999) convincingly argue that next to what the client brings
variables:
schools, our favorite techniques, our most worshipped gurus, and even
alliance reflects over 1,000 findings (Orlinsky, Grawe, & Park, 1994)
perspective. For example, Krupnick et al. (1996) analyzed data from the
TDCRP and found that the alliance was most predictive of success for
the data suggest that the alliance quality itself is an active factor
discusses the importance of finding the best match between the client
manner over a casual or warmer one. Others might prefer more self-
faster or perhaps, a more laid back pace for therapeutic work (Bachelor
One should treat as many patients as possible with a new drug while it
demoralized client.
cultures and date back to the earliest origins of human society (Frank
& Frank, 1991). Their use inspires hope and a positive expectation for
the procedures are not in and of themselves the causal agents of change
placebo factors. From this perspective, any technique from any model
and expectancy can inspire (see Hubble et al., 1999a for practical
Model/Technique Factors
Models and techniques are the last of the four factors. Like
expectancy, Assay & Lambert (1999) suggests that they account for 15%
exemplary.
dating back to the modern origins of the field (Wolberg, 1977). Whether
what Duncan and Miller (2000b) call honoring the client’s theory or
change.
therapists when progress is not forthcoming. With over 400 models and
make up their minds about clients (Miller et al., 1997). Models that
better enlist the clients unique talents, help the therapist approach
When viewed from this vantage point, models and technique no longer
(1996) has suggested, they become "a practice which teaches the
53).
If a man will kick a fact out the window, when he comes back he finds
al., 1989; Lambert & Bergin, 1994). The Consumer Reports survey, too,
(Wampold, Mondin, Moody, Stich, Benson, & Ahn, 1997). Finally, a real
one model over another are no more than would be expected by chance
(Wampold, 1997).
latest fashion, the competition among the more than 250 therapeutic
than the competition among aspirin, Advil, and Tylenol. All of them
relieve pain and work better than no treatment at all. None stands head
and shoulders above the rest. Why is the dodo bird’s wisdom ignored?
debated. The data call for a change in how we view therapy, but
There are two other reasons why the field is model maniacal. The
quest for the Holy Grail presses onward because of the desire to find
conquering it. But when reality sits in, therapists know that they can
colorized brain images won’t help when they are alone in their offices
that resides in their clients and the quality of partnership that can
be achieved.
The other reason that the dodo bird verdict is ignored is that
companies. Political and economic factors loom large. Along with the
1997, p. 10). The now famous (or infamous) task force of APA (Task
diagnoses. To make the EVT list, an approach need only demonstrate its
Seek facts and classify them and you will be the workmen of science.
find treatment differences, when they know that these effects are
EVTs equate the client with the problem and describe the
years of outcome data about common factors and the veracity of the dodo
Force might build a better case for psychotherapy from common factors
257).
with the medical model over fifty years ago when it uncritically
the field in the wrong direction…it has become overly dependent on the
(Goldfried & Wolfe, 1998). The result: Funding for studies not related
disorders. The field has already been there and done that--the dodo
bird verdict is a reality and the active ingredients model (or drug
metaphor, Stiles & Shapiro, 1989) borrowed from medicine doesn’t fit
therapy (CBT) schools (Chambless, 1996). Not only have the active
ascendancy of CBT on the EVT list speaks more to its privilege of being
Despite the dodo bird verdict and the difficulty in validating specific
effects, the task force, not unlike the pigs in Orwell’s Animal Farm,
continues to assert that some therapies are more equal than others.
DSM disorders. The RCT itself suffers from diagnostic disorder (Duncan
(Carson, 1997; Kirk & Kutchins, 1992); b) poor validity—the DSM neither
(Beutler & Clarkin, 1990; Brown et al., 1999); c) does not capture the
The Dodo Bird 60
existence, etc.); and d) does not describe the diversity of ways that
esteem, a plan for the future, etc.) (Beutler & Clarkin, 1990;
external validity (Goldfried & Wolfe, 1998). The RCT randomly assigns
therapy by the book. When they do, it does not go very well (Castonquay
are not used, therapies are not ever purely practiced, clients are not
psychotherapy. The end result of our Faustian deal with the medical
is like the old story about a fish in water. You ask a fish, “How’s the
their most undervalued point in history. The reality is, as former APA
Many blame managed care. Managed care, however, is not the real
problem (Duncan & Miller, 2000a). They are merely bouncers who strong-
Managed care has only reified practices that before were merely
One need only look in the mirror to see where managed care got the idea
Surveys of therapists of all stripes well into the 80’s show that a
scientific, and practical levels (Kirk & Kutchins, 1992). Yet, despite
debate that once raged over the value of psychotropic drugs has all but
to say the least. The APA Monitor not only regularly pummels the reader
with prescription privilege updates and photo ops for its politicians,
but also now includes drug company advertisements. What is ironic about
Greenberg & Fisher, 1997; Greenberg, 1999; Kirsch & Sapirstein, 1998),
Managed care is not the problem. The medical model is not the
problem. Privileging the medical model over the data is the problem.
predict outcome, but client ratings of the alliance do), nor permit the
Psychotherapy Future
Whoever acquires knowledge and does not practice it resembles him who
ourselves sharing the same status as the real dodo bird of Mauritius
managed health care revolution (Kiesler & Morton, 1988). Keisler has
once again gazed into his crystal ball and sees a more substantial set
of changes in the near future. Thus far in the managed care system,
in the future that “carves in” these services, following the pattern of
Patients will have one port of entry via the family physician and enjoy
one stop shopping for all their mental and medical health care needs.
diagnoses.
have not been educated about the dodo bird verdict, nor do they
understand what the data say about how change occurs in psychotherapy.
protocoled treatments, but are also given the part of compliance cops--
responsible for those renegade patients who resist the “for their own
deal with the medical model (Albee, 1998)—and the logical conclusion of
specific disorders despite the bulk of the data showing little real
professionals. More than forty years of research already points the way
recasting of the drama of therapy and retiring the script that stars
the psychotherapist. Clients are the true heroes and heroines of the
enlisting the client and his or her resources in the therapy room. It
press).
has always been present but never heard—not only in therapy itself, but
perspective, when the DSM is read without eye contact with the person
thinking, deciding agent whose deliberations about his or her life and
the best course of action are reasonable and well executed, a part of a
their perceptions, and enlist their participation, they must also ask
case records. Clients can attend staffings and case conferences, and
life plan that may not include medication or therapy, then this should
our faith in them and their choices and may, perhaps be the biggest and
This may be risky. Not for reasons that risk management attorneys
preach, but because such a stance challenges the ways of being with
personal circumstances must go deep. And the belief that clients want
better lives and have some general ideas about ways to get there must
Managed care rules and cost is king. How can psychotherapy use this
care are not working that well. The micro-management of mental health
services via treatment plans, periodic reviews, and the like amount to
and willing to work for less and less. This revolving door bureaucratic
management that is both cost effective and based in the common factors.
Partnership with clients must extend further—to partner with them not
The field must move away from the provision of services that are
informed, that are effective. Simple, reliable, and valid methods for
Outcome Questionnaire 45.2 or the Session Rating Scale; see Duncan &
Miller, 2000a; Johnson & Shaha, 1996; Lambert & Burlingame, 1996;
clients, the session-by session impact in clients’ lives and use that
both therapists and payers to know how they’re doing; are they being
say. Those who refuse to seek out and listen to client evaluations of
success risk both poor outcomes and the support of a system which now
data, would finally give the users of therapy the voice that 40 years
of data say they deserve. At the same time, the client’s voice can
process data from clients and less with partisan interests, turf wars,
vision of our identity have a chance to alter the path that has been
attempts to save our place in health care, only to guarantee our second
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