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Hofmann & Hayes. 2019

APA Citation

 Hofmann, S. G., & Hayes, S. C. (2019). The Future of Intervention Science: Process-Based Therapy. Clinical Psychological Science, 7(1), 37–50. https://doi.org/10.1177/2167702618772296

 

Publication Topic
Other Third-Wave Therapies: Conceptual
Publication Type
Article
Language
English
Keyword(s)
clinical trials, cognitive therapy, CBT, evidence-based treatments, psychotherapy
Abstract

Clinical science seems to have reached a tipping point. It appears that a new paradigm is beginning to emerge that is questioning the validity and utility of the medical illness model, which assumes that latent disease entities are targeted with specific therapy protocols. A new generation of evidence-based care has begun to move toward process-based therapies to target core mediators and moderators based on testable theories. This could represent a paradigm shift in clinical science with far-reaching implications. Clinical science might see a decline of named therapies defined by set technologies, a decline of broad schools, a rise of testable models, a rise of mediation and moderation studies, the emergence of new forms of diagnosis based on functional analysis, a move from nomothetic to idiographic approaches, and a move toward processes that specify modifiable elements. These changes could integrate or bridge different treatment orientations, settings, and even cultures.