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The Counseling Psychologist
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Some Comments on "Principles of Empirically Supported Interventions in Counseling Psychology"

Sol L. Garfield

Washington University

In this article, the author offers his appraisal of the Principles of Empirically Supported Interventions as developed by a Special Task Group of the Division of Counseling Psychology and also of the three articles evaluating these principles with reference to family interventions, anger management, and career counseling. In general, the author responds quite favorably to the principles presented and to the critical appraisal of the guidelines published earlier by the Division of Clinical Psychology. The latter are tied to Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders diagnoses and are not sensitive to important client attributes such as ethnicity, motivation for treatment, education, and the like. The counseling psychology principles also emphasize a number of other important research considerations. The author also offers some specific comments for the three areas mentioned earlier with special reference to some unmet research needs.

The Counseling Psychologist, Vol. 30, No. 2, 292-301 (2002)
DOI: 10.1177/0011000002302006


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J. W. Lichtenberg and B. E. Wampold
Closing Comments on Counseling Psychology's Principles of Empirically Supported Interventions
The Counseling Psychologist, March 1, 2002; 30(2): 309 - 313.
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