Sly Saint
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
paper here:
https://psycnet.apa.org/record/2021-45656-003
Potentially harmful therapies: A meta-scientific review of evidential value.
Abstract
Lilienfeld (2007, Psychological treatments that cause harm. Perspectives on Psychological Science, 2, 53) identified a list of potentially harmful therapies (PHTs).
Given concerns regarding the replicability of scientific findings, we conducted a meta-scientific review of Lilienfeld's PHTs to determine the evidential strength for harm. We evaluated the extent to which effects used as evidence of harm were as follows: (a) (in)correctly reported; (b) well-powered; (c) statistically significant at an inflated rate given their power; and (d) stronger compared with null effects of ineffectiveness or evidence of benefit, based on a Bayesian index of evidence.
We found evidence of harm from some PHTs, though most metrics were ambiguous. To enhance provision of ethical and science-based care, a comprehensive reexamination of what constitutes evidence for claims of harm is necessary. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved)
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Article: Some Psychological Interventions Are More Harmful Than Helpful
https://www.scientificamerican.com/...e-harmful-than-helpful/?WT.mc_id=SA_syn_RDFRS
https://psycnet.apa.org/record/2021-45656-003
Potentially harmful therapies: A meta-scientific review of evidential value.
Abstract
Lilienfeld (2007, Psychological treatments that cause harm. Perspectives on Psychological Science, 2, 53) identified a list of potentially harmful therapies (PHTs).
Given concerns regarding the replicability of scientific findings, we conducted a meta-scientific review of Lilienfeld's PHTs to determine the evidential strength for harm. We evaluated the extent to which effects used as evidence of harm were as follows: (a) (in)correctly reported; (b) well-powered; (c) statistically significant at an inflated rate given their power; and (d) stronger compared with null effects of ineffectiveness or evidence of benefit, based on a Bayesian index of evidence.
We found evidence of harm from some PHTs, though most metrics were ambiguous. To enhance provision of ethical and science-based care, a comprehensive reexamination of what constitutes evidence for claims of harm is necessary. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved)
____________
Article: Some Psychological Interventions Are More Harmful Than Helpful
We collected data from every randomized controlled trial (the sort of studies used in medicine to determine if a drug or vaccine works) for a PHT that we could find (more than 70); in total, we reviewed more than 500 statistical tests of PHTs. We then extracted and analyzed warning signs of low credibility from each study; you can therefore think of our paper as containing “credibility report cards” for each PHT.
What did we find? First, the good news: statistical typos were very rare in published research on PHTs. Moreover, the literature underpinning grief counseling—a specific PHT intended to help clients cope with the death of a loved one—looked supportive of its effectiveness and reasonably credible.
Our research suggests that being a provider or consumer of psychological interventions is tricky. Unlike the FDA for medications, medical devices and vaccines, there is no government body that judges psychological treatments as safe. Therefore, those involved need to not only consider the potential for a psychotherapy to help, but also to harm. Making these considerations even more difficult, providers and consumers need to be aware that published research on the helpfulness and harmfulness of psychological interventions is not always credible. We think that, moving forward, more consumers of psychological interventions need to feel comfortable asking providers what scientific evidence there is for a given intervention’s helpfulness and against its harmfulness.
https://www.scientificamerican.com/...e-harmful-than-helpful/?WT.mc_id=SA_syn_RDFRS
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