Power
Tips
Electronic
Journal for the New Psychotherapies - V17/8/01
The Official Journal of The Association for Meridian Therapies
Welcome
all readers, old and new, to the August 2001 edition of Power Tips, the first
electronic journal in the world for the new psychotherapies.
Our
focus this month is on developing at least an awareness of evidence-based
clinical operations, and hopefully will lead to a greater number of
practitioners evaluating and demonstrating the efficacy of their work.
Particularly
because our therapeutic approaches are so new, unless we are willing to engage
in stringent evaluation of our work, we are not only open to charges of
participating in pseudo-therapy, but we are also blissfully unaware of the
true nature of the results our clients are getting or not getting.
Best
wishes
Christine Sutherland
This
month we have the following:
- News
from the Association for Meridian Therapies. Announcing
the download section and comments option!
- A
model for ongoing evaluation of clinical efficacy.
This is a relatively simple way to measure and track the progress of your
clients. We also present a plan for engaging in international data
collection on a range of approaches to the treatment of depression.
- A
proposal for a clinical trial. Clinical research need
not be expensive, nor complex. Here is a simple design for a
clinical trial, leading you step by step through planning, running,
evaluating and writing up your own research.
- Problem
solving using Dilt's "neurological levels". Here
is how an NLP concept can be used to solve problems relatively
effortlessly, and congruent with our whole being.
News
from the Association for Meridian Therapies
Our
new and advanced interactive web portal is now operational. It is still a work
in progress but the main features are up and running and they include:
·
A great downloads section where you can download
longer files that are too cumbersome to display in web pages and including
free books on EFT and BSFF
·
Printer friendly options for all the articles
(look for the little print icon on the articles and this will just print the
article and not anything else, such as navigation bars etc, that appears on
the page);
·
The ability for anyone to *comment* on the
articles and news items - if you register as a user of the portal, you can
post comments with your name and otherwise, you can post anonymously;
·
The ability for anyone to *submit news and
content* with a simple form - you do not have to be registered with the site
to tell a story, submit a case history or share an exciting discovery.
Indeed, one of the nice features is that *articles are date stamped* - so if
you have developed something new, it may be wise to post an announcement so
no-one can say later that they invented it first;
·
Web links section for you to add to your site;
·
Reviews section so you can warn others of evil
products or alternatively, recommend books, products and trainings you thought
were excellent (reviews submissions *must be* signed with your name!)
This
site is a community portal and anyone interested in or involved with Meridian
and Energy Therapies is most welcome to use it as a platform to help inform
the public and share their views.
Under
construction are the new TheAMT.com electronic bookstore and the international
practitioner referrals.
Any
questions about TheAMT.com portal and attachment submissions including files
to add to the downloads section to webmaster(at)theamt.com
please.
A
model for ongoing evaluation of clinical efficacy.
How
do we know that what we do is effective? Many of us are proud of the
results our clients get, and for those of us who have been in the helping
professions for decades, we are particularly excited about or even grateful
for the seeming enhancement of our effectiveness since the advent of the
"power" therapies or the "energy" therapies.
The
truth is, unless we have documented evaluation in place, together with
follow-up, we really do not know what our clients' results are in the short
term, let alone the long term, and we have
no right to make any claims relating to our effectiveness.
Being subject to our own filtered perceptions, just like everyone else on the
planet, we cannot know whether the odd client we get to hear about down the
track is representative or not, or to what precise degree.
To
make claims in the absence of satisfactory evidence is to hold ourselves up as
a laughing stock. This does ourselves, our clients, and the wider
community a greater disservice because it alienates the very people who most
stand to benefit.
It
is not enough to simply go on providing unevaluated therapy on the grounds
that "love will lead the way". It has been pointed out to me
that a person may be flying a plane across the Atlantic with all the love in
the world, but unless he or she is adequately trained or qualified, it is
unlikely to end in a soft landing. One only need look at some of the
questions asked by "therapists" on the various energy and other chat
lists to discover very rapidly what a tremendous number of ignorant people are
out there ministering to the distressed with much love and very little else.
Stringent
evaluation, participated in by competent therapists, not only provides a
yardstick by which individual and overall efficacy can be measured, but if
open to public inspection, becomes a way of protecting the public from the
ministrations of the ignorant. You might like to think of the possiblity
here of a long overdue exercise in quality control.
A
Suggested Model
At
Lifeworks we have designed and trialled an evaluation system based on clients'
own ratings of the various symptomatology with which they have presented.
A SUD rating is notated against each "symptom". Items which
clients specifically choose to work with are flagged. On each successive
visit, each item is revisited and a new SUD notated. We follow-up, with
the client's permission, at 6 and 12 months post treatment.
This
simple system, requiring almost zero statistical ability, allows us to
determine the percentage improvement of the treated issues, as well as the
percentage improvement overall, over time. We also ask for qualitative
feedback concerning not just any improvement, but also relating to the
client's experience of the therapist and the client-therapist liaison itself.
Documents
relating to this system will be available in the near future from the GoE web
site, on registration as a participating therapist. No information will
be collected which could identify any client.
A
Proposal for a Clinical Trial
Over
and over therapists utilising more modern neuro-somatic (eg EFT, TAT, BSFF
etc) or neuro-linguistic (eg NLP) techniques have been severely taken to task
by colleagues, academics and professional associations or boards for not
demonstrating the evidence base for our practices.
This
is a valid criticism and I join with them in agreeing that "extraordinary
claims require extraordinary evidence". Fully aware that I am
stepping into a minefield, I have to state that I believe our extraordinary
claims can certainly be backed up by clinical research. I also believe
that any such research findings will one day be disproved. All we can
demonstrate for now is efficacy. I do not believe we can provide
evidence for precisely what it is that is working, nor can we provide
acceptable theory. If that knowledge is available (eg the excellent work
of Furman and Gallo - "The Neurophysics of Human Behavior"), it is
certainly not widely so, and is therefore unlikely to be acceptable to
critics.
So
what is it that we can demonstrate? I believe that we can demonstrate
that when a number of practitioners utilise a range of neuro-somatic or
neuro-linguistic (or spiritual) therapies with people suffering mental
distress, there is clinical and statistical evidence for the superior efficacy
of those therapies over a "no treatment" group (the control group)
and also over an "alternative treatment" group (eg, where a widely
accepted therapy, such as CBT, is utilised).
So
how do we go about planning, executing and evaluating such a trial?
After all, a relatively sophisticated grasp of statistics is required, so that
the results can be properly evaluated and errors avoided as much as possible.
The GoE, in collaboration with Lifeworks, proposes the following:
- That
suitably experienced and qualified therapists around the world are invited
to participate in a clinical trial on utilisation of the new
psychotherapies for depression. We have chosen depression because it
is one of the most common and rapidly growing mental health problems on
the planet, and is predicted by Murray and Lopez (commissioned by World
Health Organisation) to be our major health cost by 2020.
- That
some therapists will undertake to use only the new psychotherapies, while
some will undertake to use only CBT.
- That
each therapist will have a third party randomly compile a control group
and a treatment group, with members of both groups self evaluated using
the Montgomery Asberg Depression Rating Scale and The Lifeworks Joy
Inventory.
- That
the treatment phase be no longer than 2 full days. (We set that limit
firstly because the trial must not be a financial or time burden to
participating therapists, and secondly because Lifeworks recently ran a
clinical trial on depression and achieved 100% elimination of depression
after 6 days, we believe we can be reasonably assured, after 2 days, of an
effect size which demonstrates clinical and statistical advantage.)
- That
on day 3 of the trial, participants and control group again self evaluate
using the same rating scales.
- That
at 6 months and 12 months, participants and control group again self
evaluate using the same rating scales.
- That
data from these 4 evaluation phases be remitted to the GoE for statistical
analysis and compilation into a technical report which contains a review
of the literature relating to depression and depression treatment,
abstract, hypothesis, method, description of instruments, procedure,
results, discussion, and references.
- That
the technical paper be submitted to reputable medical/scientific journals
for review.
- That
copies of the paper be made available electronically to therapists who
have taken part in the study, as well as to other appropriate interested
parties as determined by the GoE and Lifeworks.
- That
copyright remain with the GoE and Lifeworks.
Please
register your interest in taking part in this trial by sending an email to Christine@lifeworks-group.com.au.
All participating therapists will need to provide documented evidence of their
qualifications and level of experience with the particular technique/s they
propose utilising.
Problem
Solving using Dilt's "Neurological Levels"
The
NLP model of “neurological levels” was originated by anthropologist
Gregory Bateson and developed by Robert Dilts.
These are
Spirituality/Purpose:
Often
a symbol or metaphorical representation of a higher ideal.
Identity:
Who
am I?
Beliefs
& Values:
What
do you believe? What’s
important to you?
Capabilities:
What
capabilities govern a behaviour?
Behaviour:
Particular
behaviours one undertakes
Environment:
What
do we see, hear, feel (etc) around us?
This
is a kind of chunking, isn’t it, with each level containing the information
for the level below it.
If
we change something at one of the lower levels, it does not necessarily change
that something all the way up the hierarchy.
However if we change something at one of the higher levels, it causes
changes in every level below.
You
can use logical levels to problem solve, to goal set, or to achieve more
congruency in the way you live.
Today
we'll look at problem solving using a floor exercise which steps us through
the neurological levels of the experience of "having the problem".
Here are the instructions:
As
a floor exercise, step out the various logical levels, commencing with the
environment level and ending with the spiritual/purpose level, in each case
describing out loud the significance of the level to that state.
(Eg,
at environment level, describe
where you are, having that problem; at behaviour
level describe what actions you are engaging in that cause or reflect the
problem; at capability level
describe the skills and knowledge involved that allow you to engage in or
tolerate that behaviour; at beliefs/values
describe what you believe about the problem that allows you to use those
capabilities; at identity level
describe who you are that would have that problem, at spirituality/purpose
describe your overall purpose or vision for your life (perhaps as a symbol) in
having that problem.)
At
what level does that problem "break down"? Particularly notice
how your vision or insight of your purpose affects every other level.
Maintaining
that clarity of vision/purpose, step back into the level of identity and feel
your identity merge with your purpose.
Maintaining
your purpose and identity, step back into the level of beliefs and feel them
all merge.
Continue
stepping back into each level, bringing the merged qualities of the other
levels with you, until you are back at the level of environment, knowing that
you have all these resources at your fingertips, perfectly aligned and
congruent, whenever you wish to use them.
Where
is your problem now?
Note:
There are very many ways to run this exercise. For instance, instead of
starting at the level of "environment" with the problem, one could
start at that level "with the problem gone". Remember this
exercise is only partially for the benefit of the conscious mind: far more is
going on unconsciously.
We
welcome your comments and suggestions to Editor@lifeworks-group.com.au.
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