Responding to Key Process Markers as a Focus of Psychotherapy Training and Practice
Historically, evidence-based psychotherapy training has favored the standardized application of discrete treatment packages, with key outcomes being the therapist's adherence to and competent delivery of theory-prescribed ingredients. However, this model often fails to align with the priorities...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Clinical Psychology in Europe (CPE) 2024-04, Vol.6 (Spec Issue), p.e11967 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Historically, evidence-based psychotherapy training has favored the standardized application of discrete treatment packages, with key outcomes being the therapist's adherence to and competent delivery of theory-prescribed ingredients. However, this model often fails to align with the priorities and values of clinicians, and research casts doubt on the notion that a therapist's faithful application of treatment protocols is a valid index of clinical expertise. Considering this, training and practice models that emphasize evidence-based clinician flexibility and patient-centered tailoring of interventions are receiving increased attention. In this article, we outline one such model informed by the context-responsive psychotherapy integration (CRPI) framework. Consistent with CRPI principles, we describe several "if this/then try that" marker-response sequences that could become a centerpiece of a more nuanced, clinically representative, and evidence-based psychotherapy training paradigm. Finally, we offer several recommendations for future work on CRPI. |
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ISSN: | 2625-3410 2625-3410 |
DOI: | 10.32872/cpe.11967 |