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A five-year evaluation of the Human Givens therapy using a practice research network

William Peter Andrews (Independent Researcher, based at Old Gwenlan, Rhosneigr, Gwynedd, UK)
Andrew Peter Wislocki (Graduate Student, based at Department of Counseling Psychology, University of Wisconsisn-Madison, Madison, WI, USA)
Fay Short (Senior Lecturer, based at Bangor University, Bangor, North Wales, UK)
Daryl Chow (Psychologist, based at Institute of Mental Health, Singapore, Singapore)
Takuya Minami (based at Department of Counseling Psychology, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI, USA)

Mental Health Review Journal

ISSN: 1361-9322

Article publication date: 23 September 2013

351

Abstract

Purpose

To replicate the Luton pilot study (Andrews et al., 2011), both by investigating treatment changes using the Human Givens (HG) approach via a practice research network (PRN) and by assessing the viability of replacing the 34-item Clinical Outcome in Routine Evaluation Outcome Measure (CORE-OM) with the ten-item version (CORE-10).

Design/methodology/approach

Clients were included if they were offered the HG approach to manage psychological distress and attended at least one measured treatment session following their initial assessment. Pre-post treatment effect size (Cohen's d) was benchmarked against data from Clark et al. (2009). Potential differences in treatment effects based on type of termination (planned vs unplanned) and medication use were examined.

Findings

High correlation between the CORE-10 and CORE-OM and near-identical calculated effect sizes support the utilisation of CORE-10 as a routine outcome measure. Pre-post treatment effect size suggests that clients treated using the HG approach experienced relief from psychological distress.

Research limitations/implications

There was no experimental control nor evidence about the precise components of the HG treatment. Data on problem description and duration may not be reliable.

Practical implications

This larger study, involving thousands of cases in a wide variety of settings, reinforces the findings from the pilot study as to the plausibility of the HG approach in the relief of emotional distress.

Originality/value

The viability of using a ten-item scale to reliably measure treatment effectiveness will allow organisations to assess the quality of their treatment with minimal disruption to their service delivery allowing for true evidence-based practice. A PRN provides a suitable mechanism to assess psychotherapy treatment effectiveness in real-world settings.

Keywords

Citation

Peter Andrews, W., Peter Wislocki, A., Short, F., Chow, D. and Minami, T. (2013), "A five-year evaluation of the Human Givens therapy using a practice research network", Mental Health Review Journal, Vol. 18 No. 3, pp. 165-176. https://doi.org/10.1108/MHRJ-04-2013-0011

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2013, Emerald Group Publishing Limited

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