
What Makes Couples Therapy Work?
Common Factors Across the Practices of Prominent Couples Therapy Model Developers
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That couples therapy works and works well is without question. What is less clear, however, is why couples therapy works. Research clearly shows that the unique ingredients of any one couples therapy model contribute very little to successful clinical outcomes. What, then, makes couples therapy effective? In this award-winning study, Dr. Davis makes the claim that although each couples therapy model has characteristics that distinguish it from other models, much of what therapists are doing in the therapy room is the same. This study represents one of the first empirical attempts to not only o...
That couples therapy works and works well is without
question. What is less clear, however, is why
couples therapy works. Research clearly shows that
the unique ingredients of any one couples therapy
model contribute very little to successful clinical
outcomes. What, then, makes couples therapy
effective? In this award-winning study, Dr. Davis
makes the claim that although each couples therapy
model has characteristics that distinguish it from
other models, much of what therapists are doing in
the therapy room is the same. This study represents
one of the first empirical attempts to not only
outline what those similarities are, but to present
these "golden threads" in an empirically derived
meta-model of couples therapy. Data for the study
were derived from interviews with prominent couples
therapy model developers Dr. Susan Johnson
question. What is less clear, however, is why
couples therapy works. Research clearly shows that
the unique ingredients of any one couples therapy
model contribute very little to successful clinical
outcomes. What, then, makes couples therapy
effective? In this award-winning study, Dr. Davis
makes the claim that although each couples therapy
model has characteristics that distinguish it from
other models, much of what therapists are doing in
the therapy room is the same. This study represents
one of the first empirical attempts to not only
outline what those similarities are, but to present
these "golden threads" in an empirically derived
meta-model of couples therapy. Data for the study
were derived from interviews with prominent couples
therapy model developers Dr. Susan Johnson