|
|
|
|
|
by antonkar
1060 days ago
|
|
One of the most proven things we have to manage depression and anger among others things (I regularly check the most recent meta analysis and CBT is always one of the top treatments by efficacy). What other psychological approach you consider more effective to manage depression? The writer of the article based it on the book by
Karla McLaren M.Ed., as her Amazon page describes her “an award-winning author, social science researcher, and pioneering educator whose empathic approach to emotions revalues even the most “negative” emotions, and opens startling new pathways into the depths of the soul.” When was the last time scientists discussed souls? Here is her articles, make your own conclusions: https://scholar.google.com/scholar?hl=en&as_sdt=0%2C5&q=Karl... Compare them with Beck’s articles: https://scholar.google.com/scholar?hl=en&as_sdt=0%2C5&q=aaro... |
|
1) The margin of CBT's superiority in robust studies (AFAICT, most published psychotherapy studies are of sufficiently poor quality that if you cited a similar one for a medical intervention, you'd be accused of being an industry shill) is likely sufficiently small as to be of little practical importance [1], and there are credible reasons to suspect that even that small apparent superiority might be an illusion caused by biases among both individual researchers and institutions [2].
2) Even if we did have robust evidence that CBT works substantially better than other modalities as a treatment, that wouldn't represent a validation of its underlying theoretical model per se; it would just suggest that any model telling us to take blatantly opposite material actions is unlikely to be valid. Consider the scenario of an isolated, highly religious society encountering leprosy. Probably the most effective intervention would be for a religious leader to tell the people that it's a punishment from the gods and sufferers must be shunned. That would work, but it would work because leprosy is caused by a pathogen spread through close contact, and the intervention provides a strong incentive to avoid close contact, not because that society's gods actually exist and care who people hang out with. That's arguably an extreme example, and my point is not to suggest that belief in CBT is akin to religion (indeed, one could reasonably argue that CBT is the flavor of psychotherapy least guilty of stumbling into a religious mode of thought), only that just-so stories are all too easy to spin.
[1] https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/36640411/
[2] https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpsyt.2018.0015...