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OARMHP
O HIO ASSOCIATION
OF RESPONSIBLE MENTAL HEALTH PRACTICES
April 2001

GREETINGS FROM
OHIO
This was
printed in the FMS Foundation newsletter in Philadelphia.
In Ohio, we
changed out name from Parents Falsely Accused to: Ohio Association of
Responsible Mental Health Practices. We followed the pattern of several
other states because it more accurately reflected what we are all about.
We now include Professionals, siblings, retractors, and more, as well as
parents.
The good news
is that we are growing smaller in number. This may seem strange as good
news, but we hope to eventually put ourselves out of business. At one
time, there were more than 700 on our mailing list and the two of us
would be on the phone every night for hours. We now have 60 regular on
our mailing list and only had three new people in 2000. Two of them were
people who just discovered us, but had received their accusations years
ago.
The bad news
is that this type of therapy, which has destroyed so many lives is still
going on and Ohio has not seen fit to pass any laws to stop it for good.
At Christmas, we received a call, which is one of the most vicious I
have heard. The therapist wanted to show up at Christmas dinner and
confront the father in front of all the relatives. Even through the
mother got wind of it, many of the relatives had heard and stayed home.
It was a horrible holiday for them.
The good news
is that we have a few retractors and many returnees in our midst and
more coming all the time. The bad news is that many parents are dying
without reconciling with their children. One such recent death of one of
our loyal supporters shows an all too frequent pattern. At one time she
had lost all five of her children, when she died in December 4 them were
with her, but one had still not returned. Another adult child returned
to find her father had Alzheimer’s and did not know her.
So the sad
tales continue and we continue to fight for “responsible mental health
practices.” Our dream and mission is for every one of the people
caught up in this terrible therapy return to their families and end this
nightmare once and for all.
Bob & Carole
In Choosing a Therapy, Think
Science
By CAROL TAVRIS Los Angeles Times Thursday,
February 8, 2001
Another unvalidated, pop-psych
therapy claims a life. Last year, 10-year-old Candace Newmaker died
during a session of "rebirthing" therapy in Colorado. Candace
was wrapped in a blanket to simulate the womb and surrounded by pillows.
The therapists then pressed on the pillows to simulate "birth
contractions" and told the girl to push her way out of the blanket
over her head. Candace, who had been adopted four years earlier and had
been treated for various psychological problems, lost consciousness and
died.
Connell Watkins, an unlicensed social
worker who operated the counseling center, and three of her employees
were charged with reckless child abuse resulting in death. The child's
mother, Jeane Newmaker, was charged with negligent child abuse.
Were the techniques used by these
therapists standard practice in psychotherapy? How is a lay person like
Jeane Newmaker, who wanted to help her troubled child, supposed to know
the difference between good therapy and bad?
First, testimonials are no guideline. No
matter what kind of therapy is involved, clients are motivated to tell
you it worked. Every kind of therapy, including rebirthing, produces
enthusiastic testimonials. But testimonials are not scientific evidence
of effectiveness. A therapy's success could be the result of the placebo
effect: The client's anticipation of success and the buzz about a new
"miracle" method might be the active ingredients rather than
the therapy itself. And notice that you never hear testimonials from the
people who dropped out, who weren't helped or who got worse.
Yet many new therapies are promoted not by
evidence of their effectiveness--as measured against control groups or
other approaches--but by the claims of a charismatic leader and the
praises of happy clients. The method is then endorsed by enthusiastic
practitioners who have been "certified" in the method, usually
by attending a weekend workshop promoted by the therapy's founder. Most
of these therapies are packaged and promoted with no scientific support
at all. They are just someone's idea of what sounds good, wrapped up in
fancy psychobabble.
The public is largely unaware of the
enormous schism that exists between the training of most
psychotherapists today and that of psychological scientists. There is no
agency or organization to protect people from ignorant or unscrupulous
therapists. Anyone can call himself or herself a
"psychotherapist" and set up any kind of program as
"therapy." (In contrast, a psychologist must have an advanced
degree and be licensed.) Thousands of people get credentials as
"experts" in various techniques and therapies--doing hypnosis
or hypnotherapy, diagnosing child sexual abuse, doing addiction or
"rage reduction" counseling--without learning the methods of
science or even the basic research that has been done on these subjects.
For example, all of the basic assumptions
of rebirthing therapy--that people can recover from trauma, insecure
attachment or other psychological problems by reliving their births--are
unsupported by the vast empirical research on infancy, attachment,
memory and post-traumatic stress disorder.
Many well-tested therapies are available
for treating psychological problems. Decades of controlled studies have
found that behavior therapy or cognitive-behavior therapy are the
treatments of choice for a wide array of problems, ranging from
depression, anxiety, panic and obsessive-compulsive disorder to coping
with chronic health problems and pain. Instead of encouraging people to
simply ventilate their emotions, blame their childhoods or talk
endlessly about their unhappiness, these approaches teach people how to
change their own self-defeating beliefs and modify the behavior that is
making them miserable.
And in the case of chronic family
problems, such as the conflict between Jeane Newmaker and her adopted
daughter, family or "systems" therapists can help both parties
understand and change destructive patterns. But this process takes time;
no quick fix or single emotional "catharsis" will provide
lasting change.
Do behavioral or family therapies help
everyone? Of course not. But they do no harm, whereas unvalidated
psychotherapies and scientifically illiterate "experts" are
causing enormous harm and sometimes death. The only way to halt these
pernicious fads has been through malpractice suits, which is how the
epidemics of "recovered memory therapy" and "multiple
personality disorder" finally have been slowed.
This means that it is up to consumers to
think critically in determining what kind of therapy and therapist might
be best for their problems. Ask about the therapist's training and
credentials. Ask whether the therapy's assumptions, methods and
effectiveness have been objectively assessed--by something other than
testimonials.
Carol Tavris, a Social Psychologist, Is Co-author of Three Introductory
Textbooks in Psychology and Author of "Anger: the Misunderstood
Emotion"
(Touchstone, 1989)
OHIO ASSOCIATION OF RESPONSIBLE
MENTAL HEALTH PRACTICES
440-356-4544 cdk77@webtv.net
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