Deliberate practice is a systematic approach for improving psychotherapy outcomes, one clinician at a time. This step-by-step guide to deliberate practice demonstrates how to collect and use client outcome data to create an individualized professional development plan to improve the quality of your service.
Your goal is to help more of your psychotherapy clients get better. For those who do realize gains, your goal is to help them experience a greater degree of improvement as a result of working with you. In this book you will learn how to conduct routine outcome measurements to gather data from your own practice. Detailed instructions and examples walk you through the process of determining your baseline performance, identifying and addressing your strengths and deficits as a practitioner, and assessing your progress.
Richly-drawn case studies and stories from the business world and popular culture illustrate how research from the field of expert performance offers a different paradigm for professional development that departs from the field’s traditional emphasis on learning therapy models and techniques. Reviews [Better Results] clearly shows that a given clinician’s performance is not the result of some inherent, immutable limit on their ability to succeed but is a function of the methods they use to train and develop. Most important of all, it provides therapists with the means for delivering more effective care. — From the Foreword; K. Anders Ericsson, PhD, Conradi Eminent Scholar and Professor of Psychology, Florida State University, Tallahassee Improving treatment effectiveness: That’s the goal to which all clinicians aspire and to which Miller, Hubble, and Chow devote this extraordinarily stimulating and eminently practical book. Learn how to leverage deliberate practice, in small actionable steps, to obtain better and better results. A transformative read! — John C. Norcross, PhD, ABPP, Distinguished Professor of Psychology, University of Scranton, Scranton, PA, and coeditor of the five-volume APA Handbook of Clinical Psychology Many therapists are unsure about the effectiveness of their work. In this fascinating and insightful book, Miller, Hubble, and Chow propose an empirically based program for how therapists can improve. It is blunt and hard-hitting, but it may help therapists achieve what they really hoped for when they entered the profession. — Amy Chua, Professor, Yale Law School, New Haven, CT, and author of Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother and Political Tribes: Group Instinct and the Fate of Nations This book has the potential to change the field of psychotherapy in remarkable ways. The authors give us the tools needed to take the guesswork out of the complexity of mind care by providing a path to professional excellence that is both orderly and governed by a clear set of principles. — Dan Short, PhD, lead author of Hope and Resiliency In this empirically sound and remarkably engaging work, Miller, Hubble, and Chow remind us that psychotherapy is a cocreative process that is more effective when corrective feedback, individualized treatment strategies, and continuous refinement are applied. This work gives hope to those who have felt confined and limited by rigid adherence to theories and techniques and seek to move beyond outdated clinical orthodoxies. I highly recommend this book to all who practice the art and science of psychotherapy. — Paul J. Leslie, EdD, author of The Art of Creating a Magical Session: Key Elements for Transformative Psychotherapy Better Results provides clinicians practice-based guidance to help clients achieve the results they are hoping for in counseling and therapy. It also provides tangible strategies for improving one’s own practice. — Robbie Babins-Wagner, PhD, RCSW, Chief Executive Officer, Calgary Counselling Centre, and Adjunct Professor & Sessional Instructor, Faculty of Social Work, University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta, Canada About the Author Scott D. Miller, PhD, is the founder of the International Center for Clinical Excellence—a consortium of clinicians, researchers, and educators dedicated to promoting excellence in behavioral health services. He conducts workshops and training, helping hundreds of organizations worldwide to achieve superior results. He writes and edits books and professional articles on the curative factors of psychotherapy and the development of expert performance. Scott’s work on routine outcome management led to the development of Feedback Informed Treatment, now listed on SAMHSA’s National Registry of Evidence-based Programs and Practice. He lives in Chicago, Illinois. Mark A. Hubble, PhD, is a founding member and senior advisor at the International Center for Clinical Excellence. He is the co-author and co-editor of many professional papers and several books—including the award winning first edition of The Heart and Soul of Change: What Works in Therapy. He also served on the editorial review board for the Journal of Systemic Therapies. His most recent work has focused on expert performance, deliberate practice, and the history and role of “magick” in psychotherapy. Mark is also a professional bass player. He lives in Danbury, Connecticut. Daryl Chow, PhD, is a senior associate of the International Center for Clinical Excellence. He conducts research and workshops on the development of expertise and highly effective psychotherapists, and ways practitioners can accelerate learning. He is the co-author of many articles and co-editor and contributing author of The Write to Recovery: Personal Stories & Lessons about Recovery from Mental Health Concerns. Currently, Daryl maintains a private practice and continues to serve as a senior psychologist at the Institute of Mental Health, Singapore. He lives in Perth, Western Australia. |