SCOTT D Miller - For the latest and greatest information on Feedback Informed Treatment

  • About
    • About Scott
    • Publications
  • Training and Consultation
  • Workshop Calendar
  • FIT Measures Licensing
  • FIT Software Tools
  • Online Store
  • Top Performance Blog
  • Contact Scott
scottdmiller@ talkingcure.com +1.773.454.8511

Dodos and Dropouts: Two Chronic Problems in Psychotherapy (and what clinicians can do about them)

August 16, 2016 By scottdm 8 Comments

Last week, my inbox started filling with emails from colleagues about a new study. Working with a real world sample, researchers compared dynamic therapy to cognitive therapy and found…

(drum roll please)

NO DIFFERENCE IN OUTCOME!

Long ago, psychologist Saul Rosenzweig dubbed the equivalence in outcome between competing brands of psychotherapy, “The Dodo Verdict.” rosenzweig and miller
(I’m the one on the right)

What’s surprising is all the attention the study has been getting.  After all, the “Dodo verdict” is one of the most robust findings in the treatment literature.  And yet, it remains a subject of controversy.  For obvious reasons, those who advocate that certain therapies are more effective than others dislike the Dodo intensely.  In fact, as I’ve reported several times on this blog, that group is forever claiming they’ve found the single study that proves it wrong.

Ultimately, however, the Dodo provides strong empirical support for something practitioners have long known: nothing works for everyone. To find the right path, therapists, and the people they serve, need choice.

Personally, I believe a much more important, yet under reported, finding of the study is the number of people who dropped out after a single visit with their therapist.  In this carefully controlled and executed study, 26% of people in both treatment conditions did not return for a second session.  Slightly more than half—50%–attended 5 sessions or less.  This after having endured a selection and recruitment process that retained only 5% of those initially screened for participation!

Beyond the impact on those seeking service (e.g., inadequate and ineffective care, longer waiting lists, etc.), unilateral client discontinuation and no shows, available evidence shows, “exact a significant financial burden in terms of staff salaries, overhead, and lost revenue, in addition to personnel losses resulting from low morale and high staff turnover.”

What can be done?

Three evidence-based ideas:

  1. Setting aside time at the outset of treatment specifically aimed at making people feel welcome and comfortable has consistently been shown to improve attendance. Known variously as “role preparation/indunction,” it’s similar to how you would treat a guest in your home, either formally or informally explaining the therapeutic process, addressing any concerns/apprehensions/misconceptions, and creating an expectation of success.
  1. Actively seek negative feedback about the therapeutic relationship.  Clients rarely report negative reactions until they’ve already decided to quit (Horvath, 2001).  Measuring and discussing the status of the working relationship has been shown to improve both retention and outcome.
  1. Monitor progress. Not surprisingly, a felt lack of improvement is predictive of service discontinuation.   Clients whose therapists use measures to identify those not making progress or worsening stay longer and improve more than those who do not.

Learn more about how to create a culture of feedback and formally monitor the progress and the therapeutic relationship in this free article from the newly published book, Quality Improvement in Behavioral Health.  Loads of “how to” resources on the ICCE YouTube channel as well.  Check it out here.

Filed Under: Feedback Informed Treatment - FIT

Making the Impossible, Possible: The Fragile Balance

July 25, 2016 By scottdm 1 Comment

Trip-Advisor scores it # 11 out of 45 things to do Sausalito, California.  No, it not’s the iconic Golden Gate Bridge or Point Bonita Lighthouse.  Neither is it one of the fantastic local restaurants or bars.  What’s more, in what can be a fairly pricey area, this attraction won’t cost you a penny.   It’s the gravity-defying rock sculptures of local performance artist, Bill Dan.

bill dan

So impossible his work seems, most initially assume there’s a trick: magnets, hooks, cement, or pre-worked or prefab construction materials.

Dan 1

Watch for a while, get up close, and you’ll see there are no tricks or shortcuts.  Rather, Bill Dan has vision, a deep understanding of the materials he works with, and perseverance.  Three qualities that, it turns out, are essential in any implementation.

Over the last decade, I’ve had the pleasure of working with agencies and healthcare systems around the world as they work to implement Feedback-Informed Treatment (FIT).  Not long ago, FIT–that is, formally using measures of progress and the therapeutic alliance to guide care–was deemed an evidence-based practice by SAMHSA, and listed on the official NREPP website.  Research to date shows that FIT makes the impossible, possible, improving the effectiveness of behavioral health services, while simultaneously decreasing costs, deterioration and dropout rates.

Dan 2

Over the last decade, a number of treatment settings and healthcare systems have beaten the odds.  Together with insights gleaned from the field of Implementation Science, they are helping us understand what it takes to be successful.

One such group is Prairie Ridge, an integrated behavioral healthcare agency located in Mason City, Iowa.  Recently, I had the privilege of speaking with the clinical leadership and management team at this cutting-edge agency.

Click on the video below to listen in as they share the steps for successfully implementing FIT that have led to improved outcomes and satisfaction across an array of treatment programs, including residential, outpatient, mental health, and addictions.

Filed Under: behavioral health, CDOI, evidence-based practice, Feedback Informed Treatment - FIT, Practice Based Evidence

Why aren’t therapists talking about this?

June 20, 2016 By scottdm 8 Comments

Turns out, every year, for the last several years, and right around this time, I’ve done a post on the subject of deterioration in psychotherapy.  In June 2014, I was responding to yet another attention-grabbing story published in The Guardian, one of the U.K.’s largest daily newspapers. “Misjudged counselling and therapy can be harmful,” the headline boldly asserted, citing results from “a major new analysis of outcomes.” The article was long on warnings to the public, but short on details about the study.  In fact, there wasn’t anything about the size, scope, or design.  Emails to the researchers were never answered.  As of today, no results have appeared in print.

One year later, I was at it again—this time after seeing the biopic Love & Mercy, a film about the relationship  between psychologist Eugene Landy and his famous client, Beach Boy Brian Wilson. In a word, it was disturbing.  The psychologist did “24-hour-a-day” therapy, as he termed it, living full time with the singer-songwriter, keeping Wilson isolated from family and friends, and on a steady dose of psychotropic drugs while simultaneously taking ownership of Wilson’s songs, and charging $430,000 in fees annually. Eventually, the State of California intervened, forcing the psychologist to surrender his license to practice.  As egregious as the behavior of this practitioner was, the problem of deterioration in psychotherapy goes beyond the field’s “bad apples.”

Do some people in therapy get worse? The answer is, most assuredly, “Yes.” Research dating back several decades puts the figure at about 10% (Lambert, 2010). Said another way, at termination, roughly one out of ten people are functioning more poorly than they were at the beginning of treatment. Despite claims to the contrary (e.g., Lilenfeld, 2007), no psychotherapy approach tested in a clinical trial has ever been shown to reliably lead to or increase the chances of deterioration. NONE. Scary stories about dangerous psychological treatments are limited to a handful of fringe therapies–approaches that have been never vetted scientifically and which all practitioners, but a few, avoid.

So, what is the chief cause of deterioration in treatment? Norwegian psychologist Jørgen A. Flor just completed a study on the subject. We’ve been corresponding for a number  of year as he worked on the project.  Given the limited information available, I was interested.

What he found may surprise you. Watch the video or click here to read his entire report (in Norwegian). Be sure and leave a comment!

Filed Under: Behavioral Health, CDOI, Conferences and Training, evidence-based practice

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 40
  • 41
  • 42
  • 43
  • 44
  • …
  • 108
  • Next Page »

SEARCH

Subscribe for updates from my blog.

[sibwp_form id=1]

Upcoming Training

There are no upcoming Events at this time.

FIT Software tools

FIT Software tools

LinkedIn

Topics of Interest:

  • behavioral health (5)
  • Behavioral Health (109)
  • Brain-based Research (2)
  • CDOI (12)
  • Conferences and Training (62)
  • deliberate practice (29)
  • Dodo Verdict (9)
  • Drug and Alcohol (3)
  • evidence-based practice (64)
  • excellence (61)
  • Feedback (36)
  • Feedback Informed Treatment – FIT (230)
  • FIT (27)
  • FIT Software Tools (10)
  • ICCE (23)
  • Implementation (6)
  • medication adherence (3)
  • obesity (1)
  • PCOMS (9)
  • Practice Based Evidence (38)
  • PTSD (4)
  • Suicide (1)
  • supervision (1)
  • Termination (1)
  • Therapeutic Relationship (9)
  • Top Performance (37)

Recent Posts

  • Agape
  • Snippets
  • Results from the first bona fide study of deliberate practice
  • Fasten your seatbelt
  • A not so helpful, helping hand

Recent Comments

  • Typical Duration of Outpatient Therapy Sessions | The Hope Institute on Is the “50-minute hour” done for?
  • Dr Martin Russell on Agape
  • hima on Simple, not Easy: Using the ORS and SRS Effectively
  • hima on The Cryptonite of Behavioral Health: Making Mistakes
  • himalaya on Alas, it seems everyone comes from Lake Wobegon

Tags

addiction Alliance behavioral health brief therapy Carl Rogers CBT cdoi common factors continuing education denmark evidence based medicine evidence based practice Evolution of Psychotherapy excellence feedback feedback informed treatment healthcare holland Hypertension icce international center for cliniclal excellence medicine mental health meta-analysis Norway NREPP ors outcome measurement outcome rating scale post traumatic stress practice-based evidence psychology psychometrics psychotherapy psychotherapy networker public behavioral health randomized clinical trial SAMHSA session rating scale srs supershrinks sweden Therapist Effects therapy Training