LECTURE 1: INTRO TO CLINICAL Proliferated in recent years Licensure enables independent
PSYCHOLOGY Ph.D. Psy.D. practice and identification as a
CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGY Emphasize Emphasize practice member of the profession
first used in 1907 by Lightner practice and over research Requires appropriate graduate
Witmer research coursework, postdoctoral internship,
Tremendous growth has resulted in a Smaller classes Larger classes and licensing exams
very broad, hard-to-define field Lower acceptance Greater acceptance Each state has its own licensing
Brief definitions emphasize the study, rate rate requirements
assessment, and treatment of people Typically in Often in free- To stay licensed, most states require
with psychological problems university standing continuing education units (CEUs)
APA Division 12 Definition of Clinical departments professional schools RPm- BS/AB PSYCH
Psychology Offer more Offer less funding to RPsy- MA/MS grad
“The field of Clinical Psychology funding to students RGC-maed,magc
integrates science, theory, and students WHERE DO CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGISTS
practice to understand, predict, and Greater success Less success in WORK?
alleviate maladjustment, disability, in placing placing students in A variety of settings, but private
and discomfort as well as to promote students in APA- APAaccredited practice is most common
human adaptation, adjustment, and accredited internships True since 1980s
personal development. Clinical internship Other common work settings include
Psychology focuses on the Universities
intellectual, emotional, biological, 3. Clinical scientist model: Psychiatric and general
psychological, social, and behavioral Emphasizing Research hospitals
aspects of human functioning across Emerged in 1990s, Community mental health
the life span, in varying cultures, and primarily as a reaction centers
at all socioeconomic levels.” (APA, against the trend toward Other settings
2012) practice represented by HOW ARE CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGISTS
Education and Training in Clinical Vail model DIFFERENT FROM OTHER
Psychology Richard McFall’s 1991 PROFESSIONALS?
Commonalities among most training “Manifesto for a Science of 1. Counseling Psychologists:
programs Clinical Psychology” Tend to see less seriously
Doctoral degree sparked this movement disturbed clients
Most enter with bachelor’s, A subset of Ph. D. Tend to work less often in
some with master’s degree institutions who strongly settings like inpatient
Required coursework endorse empiricism and hospitals or units
Thesis/dissertation science Tend to endorse humanism
Pre-doctoral internship Tend to train researchers more and behaviorism less
Education and Training: Specialty Tracks rather than practitioners Tend to be more interested
In recent decades, specialty tracks EMERGING TRENDS IN TRAINING in vocational and career
have emerged, including: 1. Technology counseling
Child Use of webcams for 2. Psychiatrists:
Health supervision Go to medical school and
Forensic
Computer-based are physicians
Family/Couple
assessment Have prescription
Neuropsychology
2. Competencies privileges (this is changing
THREE MODELS OF TRAINING
Skills that a student must for clinical psychologists)
1. Scientist-practitioner model (or
Boulder model): Balancing Practice
demonstrate Increasingly emphasize
and Science Ex. Intervention, biological/ pharmaceutical
assessment, research, etc. rather than “talk therapy”
Created in 1949 at a
INTERNSHIPS: PRE-DOC AND POSTDOC intervention
conference in Boulder,
A. Predoctoral internship 3. Social Workers
Colorado of directors of
clinical psychology training Takes place at the end of Tend to emphasize social
programs doctoral training programs factors in client’s problems
Emphasizes both practice
(before Ph.D. or Psy.D. is Earn a master’s degree
awarded) rather than a doctorate
and research
Graduates should A full year of supervised Training emphasizes
be able to clinical experience in an treatment and fieldwork
competently applied setting over research or formalized
practice (e.g., An apprenticeship of sorts, assessment
therapy, to transition from student to 4. School Psychologists:
assessment) and professional Tend to work in schools
conduct research Local- 200 clinical,120 Tend to have a more limited
A balanced indus 120 school -old professional focus than
approach 360hrs clinical psychologists
2. Practitioner-scholar model (or Vail 300 hrs.-new (student wellness and
model): Emphasizing Practice 200 hrs- internship - learning)
Created in 1973 in a (MA/MS) Frequently conduct school-
conference in Vail, B. Postdoctoral internship related testing and
Colorado Takes place after the determine LD and ADHD
Also known as practitioner- doctoral degree is awarded diagnoses
scholar model Typically lasts 1-2 years Consult with adults in
Emphasizes practice over Still supervised, but more children’s lives (e.g.,
research independence teachers, staff, parents)
Yields the Psy.D. degree Often specialized training 5. Professional Counselors:
(not the traditional Ph.D.) Often required for state Earn a master’s degree
Higher acceptance rates licensure Complete training in two
and larger classes GETTING LICENSED years
Little emphasis on Psychology was essentially Binet Intelligence Scales, which is
psychological testing or academic; no practice, just still widely used today
research study Binet’s test was intended for children
May specialized in career, In 1896, Witmer founded David Wechsler published the
school, college counseling the first psychological clinic Wechsler-Bellevue in 1939, which
RGC- MA in GC /MAED in at the U. of Pennsylvania was designed for adults
GC -2.5yrs non thesis track By 1914, there were about Wechsler later created tests for
RPSY-MS /MA PSYCH - 3 20 clinics in US schoolage and preschool children
yrs By 1935, there were over Revisions of Wechsler’s tests are
150 among the most commonly used
LECTURE 2: EVOLUTION Witmer also founded the today
EVOLUTION OF CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGY first scholarly clinical EVOLUTION OF ASSESSMENT:
The emergence of clinical psychology journal, The ASSESSMENT OF PERSONALITY
psychology around the turn of the Psychological Clinic, in Projective tests were among the
20th century was preceded by 1907 first to emerge—clients “project”
numerous important historical events EVOLUTION OF ASSESSMENT: personality onto ambiguous stimuli
These events “set the stage” for DIAGNOSTIC ISSUES Rorschach Inkblot
clinical psychology. Diagnosis and categorization of Method
EARLY PIONEERS mental illness has been central to 1921
1. William Tuke clinical psychology from the start Clients respond
1732-1822 Emil Kraepelin (1855-1926) is to ambiguous
Lived in England considered a pioneer of diagnosis inkblot
Appalled by deplorable Coined some of the earliest Thematic Apperception
conditions in “asylums” terms to categorize mental Test (TAT)
where mentally ill lived illness 1935
Devoted much of his life to Kraepelin’s work set the stage for Clients respond
improving their treatment the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual to ambiguous
Raised funds to open the (DSM), which continues to dominate interpersonal
York Retreat, a model of diagnosis today scenes
humane treatment Published by American Psychiatric Objective tests soon followed
2. Phillippe Pinel Association, originally in 1952 projectives
1745-1826 Typically paper-and-pencil,
Lived in France DSM—1952 self-report, and more
scientifically sound
Advocated for more DSM-II—1968
DSM-III—1980 MMPI (1943)—
humane and
DSM-III-R—1987 comprehensive personality
compassionate treatment
test measuring various
of the mentally ill in France DSM-IV—1994
pathologies
Also introduced ideas of a DSM-IV-TR—2000-ADHD -Type
MMPI-2 (1989)—revised
case history, treatment DSM-5—2013-Presentation and re-standardized
notes, and illness
MMPI-A (1992)—for
classification, indicating Most drastic change in DSMs is from adolescents
care about their well-being DSM-II to DSM-III Sample MMPI and Rorschach Stimuli
3. Eli Todd Larger, including more T/F I like magazines about
1762-1832 disorders motorcycles.
A physician in Connecticut Specific diagnostic criteria
T/F Sometimes I lie to get what I
At the time, there were very Multi-axial system
want.
few hospitals for the DSM-IV-TR to DSM-5
mentally ill Removal of the multi-axial
Burden for their system
care fell on As a general trend, as the DSM has
families been revised, it has expanded to
Using Pinel’s efforts as a include a greater number of disorders
model, he opened humane “Scientific discovery” or
treatment centers in US “social invention?” EVOLUTION OF PSYCHOTHERAPY
4. Dorothea Dix Psychotherapy
1802-1887 Currently, numerous disorders are the most common activity of clinical
Worked in a prison in under consideration for inclusion in psychologists today, but before the
Boston, and observed that next DSM (“proposed criteria sets”) 1940s/1950s, it was not a significant
many inmates were Internet gambling disorder professional activity
mentally ill rather than Attenuated psychosis Treatment was by medical
criminals syndrome doctors, not psychologists
Traveled to various cities to Persistent complex World War II created a demand for
persuade leaders to build bereavement treatment of psychologically affected
facilities for humane Non-suicidal self-injury soldiers
treatment of mentally ill Others Wars have had many other
Resulted in over 30 state EVOLUTION OF ASSESSMENT: influences on the evolution
institutions in US and other ASSESSMENT OF INTELLIGENCE of assessment and
countries Assessment of intelligence psychotherapy
5. Lightner Witmer characterized the profession in early When psychotherapy became a more
1867-1956 years common activity in the mid 1900s, the
Lightner Witmer and the Early debates about the definition of psychodynamic approach dominated
Creation of Clinical intelligence focused on “g” (a single, In the decades that followed,
Psychology general intelligence) vs. ”s” (specific numerous other approaches arose:
Received doctorate in 1892 intelligences) Behaviorism
in Germany Alfred Binet’s early intelligence test Humanism
(1905) later became the Stanford- Family Therapy
Most recently, cognitive therapy WHY PSYCHOLOGISTS SHOULD NOT diagnosis of normal life
(CBT) has risen to become the most PRESCRIBE: experiences
widely endorsed singular orientation A. Training issues If diagnoses continue to
DEVELOPMENT OF THE PROFESSION Which courses? When? expand, can anyone be
At the historic Boulder conference in Taught by whom? diagnosed with a mental
1949, directors of graduate training B. Threats to psychotherapy disorder?
programs agreed on a dual emphasis Would medications replace NEW DISORDERS, NEW DEFINITIONS
on practice and research talk therapy? Disorders
In the 1950s, 1960s, and 1970s, C. Identity confusion Premenstrual dysphoric
Therapy approaches Especially when only some disorder
proliferated prescribe Severe versions
More minorities entered the D. Influence of pharmaceutical of the symptoms
field industry of premenstrual
Psy.D./Vail model syndrome
programs emerged 2. Evidence-Based Practice/ Binge eating disorder
Manualized Therapy Out-of-control
In the 1980s, When researchers overeating at
Psychotherapy thrived, in measure therapy outcome, least once per
part due to increasing they often use therapy week
respect from medical manuals Definitions
professionals and To ensure ADHD
insurance companies uniformity across Age by which
The number of training therapists symptoms appear
programs and new clinical To minimize raised from 7 to
psychologists increased variability 12
When outcome data RISKS OF OVERDIAGNOSIS
In the 1990s and 2000s, supports the use of a Unnecessary medication – harmful
The size and scope of the manualized therapy, the side effects
field continues to grow treatment is known as Unnecessary therapy – undermine
Multiple training model “evidence based” coping skills
options are available Treatments formerly called Negatively impact self-image and
Empirical support of clinical “empirically validated” and self-efficacy via stigma
techniques, prescription “empirically supported” Adversely affect health insurance
privileges, and new “Evidence-based enrollment and rates
technologies are among practice” includes Legal ramifications
major contemporary issues the treatment and OVERDIAGNOSIS AND THE
LECTURE 3: CURRENT CONTROVERSIES factors related to PHARMACEUTICAL INDUSTRY
IN CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGY people providing More mental disorders = more
CURRENT CONTROVERSIES and receiving the potential pharmaceutical customers?
1. Prescription Privileges treatment Significant numbers of psychiatrists
Historically, prescribing has ADVANTAGES OF EVIDENCE-BASED involved in the creation of the DSM
distinguished psychiatrists PRACTICE/ MANUALIZED THERAPY had financial ties to major
from psychologists Scientific legitimacy pharmaceutical companies
However, in recent Establishing minimal levels of 69% for DSM-5
decades, clinical competence
psychologists have actively Training Improvements 4. Payment Methods: Third-Party
pursued prescription Decreased reliance on clinical Payment vs. Self-Payment
privileges judgment Early in the history of
Since 2002, two states DISADVANTAGES OF EVIDENCE-BASED clinical psychology, clients
have agreed to grant PRACTICE/ MANUALIZED THERAPY paid for services directly out
prescription privileges to Threats to the psychotherapy of pocket
appropriately trained relationship With time, health insurance
psychologists Diagnostic complications companies began covering
New Mexico “Textbook” cases vs. “real mental health
Louisiana world” cases Today, many clients use
Other states have Restrictions on practice health insurance/ managed
considered similar Mandated manuals vs. care benefits to pay for
legislation, and may pass it creatively customized services
soon treatments Often called
55 Debatable criteria for empirical “third-party
WHY PSYCHOLOGISTS SHOULD evidence payers”
PRESCRIBE: EFFECT OF THIRD-PARTY PAYMENT ON
A. Shortage of psychiatrists 3. Overexpansion of Mental THERAPY
Especially in rural areas Disorders Surveys of psychologists suggest
Important factor in NM and DSM size and scope has that third-party payment can result in
LA decisions increased from 1950s to Negative impact on quality
B. CPs more expert than primary care present Too little control over
docs Overdiagnosis, diagnostic clinical decisions
C. Other non-physicians have privileges expansion, diagnostic Surveys of psychologists suggest
Dentists, podiatrists, inflation, diagnostic creep, that third-party payment can result in
optometrists, and some medicalization of everyday Increased likelihood of
nurses, among others problems, false positives, being diagnosed with a
D. Convenience for clients false epidemics? mental disorder
E. Professional autonomy Minimizing the chance that EFFECT OF THIRD-PARTY PAYMENT ON
F. Professional identification people struggling with PSYCHOLOGISTS’ EXPERIENCE
G. Evolution of the profession mental illness fall through Lower pay
H. Revenue for the profession the cracks vs. over
Time required for paperwork, phone Confidentiality: Tarasoff and the Duty to C. Test data
calls, Warn (cont.) Raw data collected during
How credible are clients’ threats? assessment
5. The Influence of Technology: What kinds of threats merit Should generally be shared
Cybertherapy and More warnings? at client’s request
In recent years, clinical Confidentiality: When the Client is a Child Contemporary Ethical Issues: Managed
psychologists have Often, children will confide more if Care
increasingly used they can be assured that Managed care companies’ emphasis
technology in the direct psychologists will not repeat on financial bottom line can cause
delivery of psychological everything to their parents ethical conflicts
services Parents, of course, have a right to be Perhaps include info about managed
Assessment informed care in the informed consent process
Treatment Psychologists often make Diagnostic decisions can be
Cybertherapy can replace arrangements by discussing this with influenced by managed care
or supplement face-to-face families up front companies’ requirements
meetings Some issues, such as child abuse, Contemporary Ethical Issues: Technology
Benefits can include require breaking of confidentiality to “Psychological tests” on Internet
accessibility, affordability, protect the child Many have questionable reliability
and anonymity, and more Informed Consent and validity
APPLICATIONS OF TECHNOLOGY IN Required for research, assessment, Other issues include
CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGY: EXAMPLES therapy, and other professional ψ Identity of client
Videoconferencing to interview or activities ψ Testing conditions
treat For therapy, informed consent is an ψ Inability to observe
Email or text psychotherapy ongoing process rather than a one- behavior during testing
Interactive Internet sites time event ψ Similar concerns about
Online psychotherapy programs As psychologist learns more about online therapy
Virtual reality therapeutic client, more information can be Contemporary Ethical Issues: Small
experiences shared Communities
Computer-based self-instruction Informed consent for therapy must Small communities can be rural
Therapist/client interaction via hand- allow client the opportunity to ask areas or defined by ethnicity, religion,
held devices (e.g., iPhones, cell questions and receive answers or other variables
phones, Blackberries) Informed consent process can be an Multiple relationships can be
katatagan.com/ early part of a strong therapeutic unavoidable
HOW WELL DOES CYBERTHERAPY relationship Discuss up front with clients
WORK? Boundaries and Multiple Relationships Clarify boundaries
Appears to work about as well as 1. Knowing someone professionally and Avoid impaired judgment and
inperson psychotherapy in some other way exploitation
Specific examples include ψ Romantic/sexual, PART 2 OF LECTURE 4
CBT for anxiety disorders friendship, business, etc. The U.S. Population
Health psychology 2. Unethical when: The U. S. population is increasingly
Headaches ψ Psychologist’s objectivity, diverse, particularly in certain areas/
Pain competence, or judgment cities
TECHNOLOGY: SUGGESTIONS FOR can be impaired ψ 20% of U. S. schoolchildren
EMERGING PROFESSIONAL ISSUES Exploitation or harm could speak a language other
Obtain informed consent about the result than English at home
technology 3. Boundary crossings (minor, often ψ In Miami, Detroit, and
Follow relevant telehealth laws harmless) can lead to boundary Washington DC, a single
Follow APA ethical code violations (major, often harmful) ethnic minority group
Ensure confidentiality via encryption Competence represents over half of the
Make efforts to appreciate culture Sufficiently capable, skilled, population
Obtain relevant training experienced, and expert to complete Multiculturalism as the “Fourth Force”
Know client’s local emergency the professional tasks they undertake Some argue that multiculturalism is
resources Boundaries of competence the defining issue of the current
TECHNOLOGY: ADDITIONAL POTENTIAL ψ Psychologists should know generation of psychology
PROBLEMS their limits and seek Defining paradigms of previous
Confirming the identity of the client additional training or generations have included
Confidentiality across electronic supervision when ψ Psychoanalysis
transmission necessary
ψ Behaviorism
Making interpretations in the absence Continuing education can maintain
ψ Humanism/person-
of nonverbal cues that would be competence
centered
Importance of cultural competence
present face-to-face Multiculturalism can enhance any of
Competence in technical as well as Burnout can impair competence previous “forces”
clinical skills ψ Burnout can be minimized Culture and Clients
TECHNOLOGY: EFFECTIVENESS OF by efforts by the Culture shapes how clients
TREATMENT psychologist to keep job understand their problems
varied, keep life balanced,
Early research is beginning to Questions to assess client
demonstrate that it can work keep expectations
understanding:
Success depends on many factors: reasonable, and keep self-
ψ What do you call your
Which cybertherapy, healthy
problem (illness, distress)?
disorder, device? Ethics in Clinical Assessment
A. Test selection ψ What do you think your
What setting? problem does to you?
How clients found or were Consider competence,
culture, test’s reliability and ψ What do you think the
referred to cybertherapy? natural cause of your
LECTURE 4: ETHICAL ISSUES AND validity
B. Test security problem is?
CONDUCTING RESEARCH IN CLINICAL ψ How do you think this
PSYCHOLOGY Don’t allow test materials to
enter public domain problem should be treated?
ψ Who else (e.g., family, Cultural Competence: Culturally The success of a therapy in
religious leaders) do you Appropriate Clinical Skills actual clinical settings in
turn to for help? Techniques should be consistent with which client problems are
Recent Professional Efforts to Emphasize the values and life experiences of not limited to
Issues of Culture each client predetermined criteria
Journals and books on cultural topics “Talk therapy” may work better for how well a therapy works
New APA divisions some cultural groups than for others “in the real world”
ψ Division 35—Society for Some cultural groups may respond 1995 Consumer Reports survey of
the Psychology of Women more positively to “action” than readers is an example
ψ Division 36—Psychology “insight” Generally positive toward
of Religion Microaggressions psychotherapy, but
ψ Division 44—Society for Comments or actions made scientific rigor is
the Psychological Study of in cultural context that questionable
Lesbian, Gay, and Bisexual (often unintentionally) Research on Treatment Outcome
Issues convey negative beliefs Statistical vs. clinical (“real world”)
ψ Division 45—Society for Cultural Adaptation significance
the Study of Ethnic Minority Modifying treatments with empirical Statistical significance doesn’t
Issues evidence for members of a cultural necessarily mean clinical significance
ψ Division 51—Society for group Internal validity
the Psychological Study of Etic vs. Emic Perspective The extent to which change in the DV
Men and Masculinity Etic is due to change in the IV
DSM efforts toward Emphasizes similarities between all Generally high in efficacy studies
multiculturalism people External validity
ψ Text describing cultural Assumes universality Generalizability of result
variations of disorders Downplays culture-based differences Generally high in effectiveness
ψ General guidance for Emic studies
cultural competence Emphasizes culture-specific norms Research on Assessment Methods
“Outline for Appreciate clients in the context of Examples can include:
Cultural their own culture Validation or expanded use of
Formulation” Tripartite Model of Personal Identity assessment tools
“Cultural Three levels of identity Establishing psychometric data for
Formulation 1. Individual level assessment tools
Interview” Every person is totally Comparing multiple assessment
ψ Cultural concepts of unique tools to each other
distress glossary 2. Group level Others
Some related to Every person is like some Research on Diagnostic Issues
DSM disorders; others Examples can include:
others unique 3. Universal level Examine reliability or validity of
Examples. Taijin Every person is like all diagnostic constructs
kyofusho, susto, others Examine relationships between
maladi moun What Constitutes a Culture? disorders
Revisions of prominent Narrow vs. broad definitions Prevalence or course of disorders
assessment methods ψ Some argue that ethnicity Others
ψ MMPI-2- 567items t/f and race are the defining Research on Professional Issues
ψ Wechsler intelligence tests characteristics of culture Examples can include psychologists’:
Cultural Competence ψ Others argue that many Beliefs
The counselor’s acquisition of other variables can define a Activities
awareness, knowledge, and skills culture, such as Practices
needed to function effectively in a Socioeconomic Other aspects of their professional
pluralistic democratic society status, Religion, lives
3 main components: Gender, Age, Research on Teaching and Training Issues
ψ Awareness Geography/regio Examples can include:
ψ Knowledge n, Political Training philosophies
ψ Skills affiliation, Specific coursework
Cultural Competence: Self-Awareness Disability status Opportunities for specialized training
Learning about one’s own culture Training Psychologists in Cultural Issues Outcome of training efforts
ψ Values, assumptions, Educational alternatives Comparison to training in similar
biases ψ Courses disciplines
ψ By doing so, become less ψ Readings Others
egocentric ψ Real-world experiences How Do Clinical Psychologists Do
ψ Realize that differences are ψ Recruit and retain diverse Research?
not deficiencies students and faculty The Experimental Method
Cultural Competence: Knowledge of ψ Encourage cultural self- Observation of events
Diverse Cultures knowledge, curiosity, and Hypothesis
Can gain knowledge by humility Define independent and dependent
ψ Reading, especially Lecture 5 AND 6: Conducting Research in variables
regarding history Clinical Psychology Empirically test the hypothesis
Research on Treatment Outcome
ψ Direct experiences Alter hypothesis as necessary per
ψ Relationships with people 1. Efficacy
results
of various cultures The success of a particular Quasi-experiments
therapy in a controlled
Acculturation Used in place of true experiments
study conducted with
ψ Response to new cultural when practical, ethical, or other
clients who meet specific
environment issues limit manipulations
criteria
ψ Balance between adopting Less scientifically sound than true
how well a therapy works
new and retaining original experiments, but common in clinical
“in the lab”
culture psychology
2. Effectiveness
Between-group designs Nine subsequent revisions Cases involving
Participants in different conditions Applies to all specialities child abuse
receive entirely different treatments ψ Especially relevant to Informed Consent
Often, an experimental condition vs. clinical psychologists Facilitates an educated decision
a control group Aspirational and Enforceable Required during
Within-group designs Aspirational – General Principles ψ Research
Compare participants in a single Enforceable – Ethical Standards ψ Assessment
condition to selves at different points General Principles: ψ Therapy
in time Describe an ideal level of ethical Boundaries and Multiple Relationships (1 of
Mixed-group designs functioning or how psychologists 3)
Combination of between- and within- should strive to conduct themselves. Multiple relationships
group They don’t include specific definitions ψ Can be problematic
Analogue designs of ethical violations; instead, they ψ The claim of their
Used when actual clinical populations offer more broad descriptions of nonexistence would be
or situations can’t be accessed exemplary ethical behavior. false
An approximation or simulation of the 1. Beneficence and Nonmaleficence. Defining Multiple Relationships
“real thing” 2. Fidelity and Responsibility. ψ Ethical Standard
Correlational designs 3. Integrity. ψ Sexual multiple
Examine relationship between two or 4. Justice. relationships
more variables 5. Respect for People’s Rights and ψ Nonsexual multiple
Causality cannot be determined Dignity. relationships
Often used when experimental or Ethical Standards:
What Makes Multiple
quasi-experimental designs are not If a psychologist is found guilty of an Relationships Unethical?
feasible ethical violation, it is a standard (not
ψ Criteria for impropriety
Case studies a principle) that has been violated.
Impairment in the
Detailed examination of a single These standards are written broadly
psychologist
person or situation; often very enough to cover the great range of
activities in which psychologists Exploitation or
clinically relevant harm to the client
Often qualitative rather than engage, but they are nonetheless
ψ Need for caution and
quantitative more specific than the general
principles. Although each general foresight
Demonstrates the idiographic
approach to research (vs. nomothetic principle could apply to almost any
approach) task a psychologist performs, each
Can inspire more systematic ethical standard typically applies to a
research more targeted aspect of professional
ABAB design is one example activity.
1. Resolving Ethical Issues.
Alternately apply and remove a
2. Competence.
treatment
3. Human Relations.
Meta-analysis
4. Privacy and Confidentiality.
Statistical method of combining
5. Advertising and Other Public
results of separate studies into a
Statements.
single summary finding
6. Record Keeping and Fees.
Findings are translated into effect 7. Education and Training.
sizes 8. Research and Publication.
Can quantitatively capture the trends 9. Assessment.
of many individual studies 10. Therapy.
Examples include meta-analyses of Ethical Decision Making
psychotherapy outcome Models have been recommended by
Cross-sectional designs expert
Compare participants at a single Best preparation to deal with
point in time dilemmas
More efficient than longitudinal Psychologists’ Ethical Beliefs
designs Based on survey of American
Longitudinal designs Psychological Association members
Compare participants at different Based on studies by other
points in time researchers
Less efficient than cross-sectional Confidentiality [1 of 2)
designs, but can be more valid in Specifically mentioned in
assessing change across time ψ General principles
Ethical Issues in Research in Clinical
ψ Ethical standards
Psychology
Reason for emphasis
Numerous APA ethical standards
specifically address research: Tarasoff and the Duty to Warn
Obtain informed consent ψ Tarasoff case
Don’t coerce participation Duty to warn and
duty to protect
Use deception only when justified
and necessary ψ Challenges faced by clinical
psychologists
Minimize harm to participants
ψ Interpretations vary from
Don’t fabricate or falsify data
state to state
Assign authorship appropriately
When the Client Is a Child or
Share data with other researchers for
Adolescent
verification
ψ Dilemma: How much to
LECTURE 5 AND 6: PART 2
reveal to parents?
American Psychological Association Code
of Ethics Possible
arrangements
First published in 1953