The future of psychological treatments: The Marburg Declaration

Although psychological treatments are broadly recognized as evidence-based interventions for various mental disorders, challenges remain. For example, a substantial proportion of patients receiving such treatments do not fully recover, and many obstacles hinder the dissemination, implementation, and...

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Veröffentlicht in:Clinical psychology review 2024-06, Vol.110, p.102417-102417, Article 102417
Hauptverfasser: Rief, Winfried, Asmundson, Gordon J.G., Bryant, Richard A., Clark, David M., Ehlers, Anke, Holmes, Emily A., McNally, Richard J., Neufeld, Carmem B., Wilhelm, Sabine, Jaroszewski, Adam C., Berg, Max, Haberkamp, Anke, Hofmann, Stefan G.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Although psychological treatments are broadly recognized as evidence-based interventions for various mental disorders, challenges remain. For example, a substantial proportion of patients receiving such treatments do not fully recover, and many obstacles hinder the dissemination, implementation, and training of psychological treatments. These problems require those in our field to rethink some of our basic models of mental disorders and their treatments, and question how research and practice in clinical psychology should progress. To answer these questions, a group of experts of clinical psychology convened at a Think-Tank in Marburg, Germany, in August 2022 to review the evidence and analyze barriers for current and future developments. After this event, an overview of the current state-of-the-art was drafted and suggestions for improvements and specific recommendations for research and practice were integrated. Recommendations arising from our meeting cover further improving psychological interventions through translational approaches, improving clinical research methodology, bridging the gap between more nomothetic (group-oriented) studies and idiographic (person-centered) decisions, using network approaches in addition to selecting single mechanisms to embrace the complexity of clinical reality, making use of scalable digital options for assessments and interventions, improving the training and education of future psychotherapists, and accepting the societal responsibilities that clinical psychology has in improving national and global health care. The objective of the Marburg Declaration is to stimulate a significant change regarding our understanding of mental disorders and their treatments, with the aim to trigger a new era of evidence-based psychological interventions. •Psychological treatments are recognized as evidence-based interventions for various mental disorders, but challenges remain.•We review the evidence and analyze barriers for current and future developments in the field of clinical psychology.•Suggestions for improvements and specific recommendations for research and practice were provided.
ISSN:0272-7358
1873-7811
1873-7811
DOI:10.1016/j.cpr.2024.102417