Discussion about this post

User's avatar
Susan R Johnson, MD's avatar

I am a retired psychiatrist, having trained back in the 1980, when insight oriented psychotherapy was still taught, before the explosion of psychotropics hit the scene. Having had a lot of psychotherapy, both as a therapist and a patient, I still go back to Yalom’s assertion that “it is the relationship that heals.” I believe that strongly. I never was a big fan of manualized therapy, personally.

Expand full comment
Baird Brightman's avatar

"In the medical world, we can be sure that statin drugs will work just about the same in all patient populations."

Not true. Drug main effects reflect the tyranny of the mean. There is enormous within-group variation in response to both medications and psychotherapy. The words "ON AVERAGE, treatment X works better than no treatment" means only that.

Both physicians and psychotherapists squirm a bit under scientific scrutiny. Many like to say that what they do is "too complicated" to be studied by standard research methods. This is nothing more than professional arrogance ("Just take my word for it!"). When Hans Eysenck challenged the psychoanalysts to "prove" that their therapy works back in the 1950's, heads exploded, but the psychotherapy research literature has illuminated important truths. Science, like everything, has its limits, but if we want people to trust us, we need to offer more than a parental "Because I say so" when they ask reasonable questions about our methods and prescriptions.

Expand full comment
29 more comments...

No posts