EMPIRICAL VALIDATION AND PROFESSIONAL CODES OF ETHICS: DESCRIPTION OR PRESCRIPTION?
Titel:
EMPIRICAL VALIDATION AND PROFESSIONAL CODES OF ETHICS: DESCRIPTION OR PRESCRIPTION?
Auteur:
Bryceland, Christy Stam, Henderikus J.
Verschenen in:
Journal of constructivist psychology
Paginering:
Jaargang 18 (2005) nr. 2 pagina's 131-155
Jaar:
2005-03-16
Inhoud:
Codes of ethics have begun to refer to preferences that interventions be “empirically supported.” The movement toward Empirically Supported Treatments (ESTs) is based on a medical model of intervention using randomized controlled trials as the prime method, one originally developed to test the efficacy of educational reforms and, later in the twentieth century, of medical interventions. It presumes standardized, “objective” procedures that demonstrate interventions in an unambiguous manner. As a methodology it limits the demonstrable efficacy of alternative forms of psychotherapy. Alternative practices, including constructivist approaches, are at risk of being considered unethical within this framework because their practitioners are unlikely to conduct the kind of outcome research that is considered necessary to demonstrate efficacy (e.g., APA Division 12 criteria). This article will consider the historical context of the professionalization of psychotherapy, the development of modes of outcome research, and the role of institutional texts such as ethics codes. The latter can act as regulatory tools guarding the autonomy of the psychology profession, and responding to the pressures of the market to maintain psychology's self-regulatory role. The move toward placing ESTs within codes of ethics is premised on limited conceptions of therapy that, we argue, fail to grasp the moral nature of the therapeutic relationship.