Guest guest Posted April 18, 2001 Report Share Posted April 18, 2001 Roland A. Carlstedt, a regular contributor to the SPORTPSY discussion list very kindly gave me permission to post a copy of his recent letter to that group. Rcarlstedt@... wrote: <....... we must be very cautious when citing, believing, or deferring to " Relevant Authorities, " and whenever engaging (therapeutic) interventions. If you want to talk ethics, PRACTITIONERS should be professionally obligated to mention that an intervention may not work, that even if it does we do not really know what or how something WORKS, let alone are able to replicate, control, or monitor the effects of an intervention longitudinally and only can suspect or assume an intervention will affect performance (in a very aspecific manner at best). The failure to make such clear to clients could also be considered unethical and make it untenable to criticize persons practicing outside the arms of the self-annointed guilds " regulating " the field (the RELEVANT AUTHORITIES). These authorities in their zest to establish models for practice often forget that they, the AUTHORITY, essentially continue to perpetuate many myths and scientific half-truths under the guise of the TRUTH. One way to shake up the AUTHORITIES is to " invent " a new intervention. Francis Shapiro and her EMDR (Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing) comes to mind as an example of how a person with a questionable (in the eyes of the authority) credential (a Ph.D. from a unaccredited school), but a supposedly " potent " new intervention leapfrogged to the front of psychotherapy, gaining the endorsements of a Harvard psychiatrist (WOW, the ultimate authority), among others, once the potential of her miracle intervention became recognized (I tend to think economic potential was recognized the most). All of a sudden, despite the unanswered scientific status of her intervention, her method became mainstream and worthy of APA continued education credits. Depending on who or what sort of an authority you were, YOUR journal would publish studies either pro or contra to EMDR. Who or what AUTHORITY should one believe? This recent event in the history of psychology illustrates that we have not advanced much beyond the sale of " snake oil " in the continued quest of Americans (I am an American) to attain perfection and make a buck. And I see the same happening in sport psychology where one myth after the another continues to be SOLD, backed by SCIENCE or by ignoring science (NEGATIVE FINDINGS, e.g., regarding hypnosis in sport) and the AUTHORITY of choice.> [Mel Siff: For those who may be unfamiliar with EMDR - Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing - it is yet another rather guruesque system of therapy which draws on several different existing psychological procedures and places it within a framework where examination of client eye movements plays a central role in analysing and applying therapy to handle various psychological stresses. For further details, go to the official EDMR web site: http://www.emdr.com/ ] --------------------------------- Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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