When experiencing mental health challenges, we all deserve treatments that actually work. Whether you are a healthcare consumer, student, or mental health professional, this book will help you recognize implausible, ineffective, and even harmful therapy practices while also considering recent controversies. Research-supported interventions are identified in this book and expanded upon in a companion volume. Chapters cover every major mental disorder and are written by experts in their respective fields. Pseudoscience in Therapy is of interest to students taking courses in psychotherapy, counseling, clinical psychology, and behavior therapy, as well as practitioners looking for a guide to proven therapeutic techniques. • A comprehensive resource on ineffective therapeutic approaches for adult mental health issues • Summarizes historical research and includes recent findings • Includes summaries of research-supported approaches and provides guidance on which approaches actually work • Can be used in tandem with the companion book, Science-Based Therapy Reviews: ‘‘Psychotherapy' offers a spectrum of practices and techniques, some effective and evidence-based, some of dubious value, and some that violate the principle of ‘do no harm'. This book is an impressive, comprehensive, and well-written guide to choosing efficacious therapy while avoiding the useless and the bogus. I highly recommend it.' James E. Alcock, York University, Canada ‘This book is a valuable contribution to the literature on bogus psychotherapeutic techniques for a wide range of psychological disorders. It provides a comprehensive overview of what works and, more importantly, what doesn't. It will be useful to therapists to guide their choices of which techniques to employ.' Terence Hines, Pace University, USA ‘Pseudoscience in Therapy is about bad ideas in the mental health field, and also about good ones. It's about the untested, unsupported, and potentially harmful treatments for various conditions, such as trauma, dissociative disorders, pain, and insomnia. And it's about the good, evidence-based practices for these conditions. A superb collection of clinicians and researchers share their wisdom about the pseudoscience they have seen, and the good practices they encourage. With this one-of-a-kind book, that so artfully encourages skeptical thinking, both patients and their treaters will be far better off.' Elizabeth F. Loftus, University of California, Irvine, USA ‘Hupp and Santa Maria have produced a book that should be on every therapist's shelf. A complete, easy-to-use guide to all the many dubious psychological therapies and their evidence-based counterpoints. Experts in the major psychological disorders succinctly review the scientific and pseudoscientific landscape in a form that makes additional research easy to pursue. Highly recommended.' Stuart Vyse, contributing editor Skeptical Inquirer magazine and author of Believing in Magic: The Psychology of Superstition ‘This client- and outcomes-focused book is a valuable read for both new and experienced therapists. Experts from multiple fields weigh in on potentially harmful practices commonly used for various diagnoses, as well as provide effective evidence-based treatments for the same diagnoses. The chapters in this interesting collection can help you think more critically about popular treatments and our responsibility as therapists to deliver the best care possible, supported by science.’ Judith Beck, President of the Beck Institute, USA Table of Contents 1. Thinking critically about therapy Cara L. Santa Maria 2. Depression R. Trent Codd III 3. Bipolar spectrum Monica Ramirez Basco and Brittany L. Mason 4. Anxiety Dean McKay 5. Obsessions and compulsions Dean McKay 6. Trauma Gerald M. Rosen, Henry Otgaar, and Harald Merckelbach 7. Dissociation Steven Jay Lynn, Fiona Sleight, Craig P. Polizzi, Damla Aksen, Lawrence Patihis, Henry Otgaar and Olivier Dodier 8. Pain Harriet Hall 9. Eating issues Jamie Loor, Jennifer Battles, Brooke L. Bennett, Brooke L. Whisenhunt, and Danae L. Hudson 10. Insomnia Colleen E. Carney, Parky H. Lau and Samlau Kutana 11. Sexual issues Caroline F. Pukall 12. Substance use and addiction Jonathan N. Stea, Igor Yakovenko, Hyoun S. Kim, and David C. Hodgins 13. Significant cognitive decline Claudia Drossel and Jacqueline Pachis 14. Antisocial behavior Devon L. L. Polaschek 15. Personality Joel Paris 16. Psychosis and schizophrenia Brandon A. Gaudiano, Katherine Visser and Elizabeth Thompson 17. Autism spectrum and intellectual disability Jason C. Travers 18. Inattention and hyperactivity J. Russell Ramsay 19. Tics Kirsten Bootes, Brianna Wellen, Emily Braley and Michael B Himle 20. Couples discord Erin F. Alexander and Matthew D. Johnson Postscript: Scientific skepticism resources Stephen Hupp Index. About the Editors: Stephen Hupp, Ph.D., is a Licenced Clinical Psychologist and Professor at Southern Illinois University Edwardsville, USA, where he has won the Great Teacher Award and the Champion for Diversity Award. His edited books include Investigating Pop Psychology (2023), Pseudoscience in Child and Adolescent Psychotherapy (2019), and Child and Adolescent Psychotherapy: Components of Evidence-Based Treatments for Youth and Their Parents (2018). His co-authored books include Great Myths of Child Development (2015), Great Myths of Adolescence (2019), and Thinking Critically about Child Development (2020). He has also written a skeptical game book for children called Dr. Huckleberry's True or Malarkey? Superhuman Abilities (2021). Cara L. Santa Maria, MS, MA, is a public communicator of science and Doctoral Candidate in Clinical Psychology at Fielding Graduate University, USA. She has won several awards for science and public interest journalism, including three Los Angeles Area Emmy Awards, the Knight Foundation Innovation Give Forward Award, a Golden Mic Award, and an LA Press Club Award. She is co-author of The Skeptics' Guide to the Universe (2018), and she hosts numerous podcasts including The Skeptics' Guide to the Universe, Fixed that for You, and Talk Nerdy with Cara Santa Maria, which was once featured as a category on Jeopardy!. She was a correspondent for National Geographic's Brain Games and Explorer, as well as Netflix's Bill Nye Saves the World. Contributors: Dean McKay, Gerald M Rosen, Henry Otgaar, Harald Merckelbach, Steven Jay Lynn, Fiona Sleight, Craig P Polizzi, Damla Aksen, Lawrence Patihis, Olivier Dodier, Harriet Hall, Jamie Loor, Jennifer Battles, Brooke L. Bennett, Brooke L. Whisenhunt, Danae L. Hudson, Colleen E. Carney, Parky H. Lau, Samlau Kutana, Caroline F. Pukall, Jonathan N. Stea, Igor Yakovenko, Hyoun S. Kim, David C. Hodgins, Claudia Drossel, Jacqueline Pachis, Devon L. L. Polaschek, Joel Paris, Brandon A. Gaudiano, Katherine Visser, Elizabeth Thompson, Jason C. Travers, J. Russell Ramsay, Kirsten Bootes, Brianna Wellen, Emily Braley, Michael B. Himle, Erin F. Alexander, Matthew D. Johnson, Stephen Hupp
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