Do clients train therapists to become eclectic and use the common factors? A qualitative study listening to experienced psychotherapists

Abstract Background Psychotherapists must choose from an overwhelming number of theoretical models and empirically supported treatments to guide their work. Meta-analytic studies show there is comparable efficacy among the choices, making the decision about which approach to use difficult. Research...

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Main Author: Douglas Behan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2022-07-01
Series:BMC Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s40359-022-00886-6
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author Douglas Behan
author_facet Douglas Behan
author_sort Douglas Behan
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Background Psychotherapists must choose from an overwhelming number of theoretical models and empirically supported treatments to guide their work. Meta-analytic studies show there is comparable efficacy among the choices, making the decision about which approach to use difficult. Research indicates there are pantheoretical elements found in all effective models, called the common factors, which can offer psychotherapists a focusing point to maximize their effectiveness regardless of their chosen approach. Most psychotherapists begin practicing from a traditional theoretical orientation, but then their approach evolves over time toward an unintentional eclecticism, derived primarily from their practice experience with clients. Methods This exploratory qualitative study conducted in-depth interviews with six experienced clinical social workers about their evolution as psychotherapists and what they believe creates change in psychotherapy. The interviews were conducted using standardized prompts and then coded and analyzed utilizing thematic analysis based on a six-phase framework. Results The analysis suggests the psychotherapists had evolved to conducting therapy via an implicit and unique approach based on an unintentional heavy use of common factors. Five prominent themes emerged as central components of change in psychotherapy: the therapeutic relationship as a primary change agent, the importance of the therapist genuineness, the need to acknowledge and act upon a poor therapist—client match, the client bearing the primary responsibility for change, and the therapists’ development of unintended eclecticism in response to client interactions. Conclusions In practice, most psychotherapists start practicing from a traditional theoretical orientation only to find their approach evolves over time toward an informal eclecticism featuring common factors. This common factors-based eclecticism emerges primarily from practice experience with clients. These findings suggest an avenue for further inquiry—if psychotherapists are going to gradually evolve in an unplanned eclectic direction guided by their client interactions, are they also concurrently and inherently drawn to the common factors? If the answer proves to be yes, what are the implications for early training? Should the gradual emphasis toward common factors be supplanted with a more intentional and efficient focus on them in the training of students and early career clinicians?
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spelling doaj.art-731e8d1cb461440391a0819d6c7e9de12022-12-22T01:33:20ZengBMCBMC Psychology2050-72832022-07-0110111310.1186/s40359-022-00886-6Do clients train therapists to become eclectic and use the common factors? A qualitative study listening to experienced psychotherapistsDouglas Behan0School of Social Work, Rutgers, The State University of New JerseyAbstract Background Psychotherapists must choose from an overwhelming number of theoretical models and empirically supported treatments to guide their work. Meta-analytic studies show there is comparable efficacy among the choices, making the decision about which approach to use difficult. Research indicates there are pantheoretical elements found in all effective models, called the common factors, which can offer psychotherapists a focusing point to maximize their effectiveness regardless of their chosen approach. Most psychotherapists begin practicing from a traditional theoretical orientation, but then their approach evolves over time toward an unintentional eclecticism, derived primarily from their practice experience with clients. Methods This exploratory qualitative study conducted in-depth interviews with six experienced clinical social workers about their evolution as psychotherapists and what they believe creates change in psychotherapy. The interviews were conducted using standardized prompts and then coded and analyzed utilizing thematic analysis based on a six-phase framework. Results The analysis suggests the psychotherapists had evolved to conducting therapy via an implicit and unique approach based on an unintentional heavy use of common factors. Five prominent themes emerged as central components of change in psychotherapy: the therapeutic relationship as a primary change agent, the importance of the therapist genuineness, the need to acknowledge and act upon a poor therapist—client match, the client bearing the primary responsibility for change, and the therapists’ development of unintended eclecticism in response to client interactions. Conclusions In practice, most psychotherapists start practicing from a traditional theoretical orientation only to find their approach evolves over time toward an informal eclecticism featuring common factors. This common factors-based eclecticism emerges primarily from practice experience with clients. These findings suggest an avenue for further inquiry—if psychotherapists are going to gradually evolve in an unplanned eclectic direction guided by their client interactions, are they also concurrently and inherently drawn to the common factors? If the answer proves to be yes, what are the implications for early training? Should the gradual emphasis toward common factors be supplanted with a more intentional and efficient focus on them in the training of students and early career clinicians?https://doi.org/10.1186/s40359-022-00886-6Common factorsTherapeutic relationshipEclectic
spellingShingle Douglas Behan
Do clients train therapists to become eclectic and use the common factors? A qualitative study listening to experienced psychotherapists
BMC Psychology
Common factors
Therapeutic relationship
Eclectic
title Do clients train therapists to become eclectic and use the common factors? A qualitative study listening to experienced psychotherapists
title_full Do clients train therapists to become eclectic and use the common factors? A qualitative study listening to experienced psychotherapists
title_fullStr Do clients train therapists to become eclectic and use the common factors? A qualitative study listening to experienced psychotherapists
title_full_unstemmed Do clients train therapists to become eclectic and use the common factors? A qualitative study listening to experienced psychotherapists
title_short Do clients train therapists to become eclectic and use the common factors? A qualitative study listening to experienced psychotherapists
title_sort do clients train therapists to become eclectic and use the common factors a qualitative study listening to experienced psychotherapists
topic Common factors
Therapeutic relationship
Eclectic
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s40359-022-00886-6
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