Beutler Larry E
Pacific Graduate School of Psychology, Palo Alto University.
Psychotherapy (Chic). 2014 Dec;51(4):496-9. doi: 10.1037/a0036540.
Laska, Gurman, and Wampold (2014, pp. 467-481) argue for the inclusion of common factors (CF) approaches to psychotherapy to be an alternative to empirically supported therapies when developing an evidence-based practice. Although we applaud their scholarship and the cogency of their arguments, we believe that they fall short of what is needed to define an optimal and effective therapy. Integration rather than amalgamation better captures the complexity of psychotherapy and adds to the explained variance. While CF dimensions certainly should be considered within the research definition of "psychotherapy," there are also important characteristics of the participants that are not captured in either the patient's diagnosis or the interventions that the therapist uses that affect outcome. We believe that the authors have inadvertently equated CFs with nonspecific ones and thus excluded a host of moderating variables in psychotherapy that produce specific and differential effects but which are not "nonspecific".
拉斯卡、古曼和万波尔德(2014年,第467 - 481页)主张,在发展循证实践时,将心理治疗的共同因素(CF)方法纳入其中,作为实证支持疗法的替代方案。尽管我们赞赏他们的学术成就和论点的说服力,但我们认为,他们未能达到定义一种最佳且有效疗法所需的标准。整合而非合并能更好地体现心理治疗的复杂性,并增加可解释的方差。虽然CF维度在“心理治疗”的研究定义中当然应该被考虑,但参与者还有一些重要特征,这些特征在患者诊断或治疗师使用的干预措施中均未体现,而这些特征会影响治疗结果。我们认为,作者无意中将CF与非特异性因素等同起来,从而排除了心理治疗中一系列产生特定和差异效应但并非“非特异性”的调节变量。