Quote:
Originally Posted by Skies
That wasn't the focus of the article, but there was mention of it:
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I just think it's dishonest to talk about ineffectiveness without even mentioning harm (in the first article). Implies that therapy is either helpful or benign. There are lots of articles that discuss failures and drop-outs in a distant and abstract way, as data to be crunched to give the researchers something to blather on about. Very few articles where they show interest in the failures themselves.
"The wrong therapy, by the wrong therapist or with the wrong timing (or a combination thereof) may be psychonoxious."
Another cunning little deceit in that statement. They can't or won't face that possibility that therapy might be "psychonoxious" (they should be shot for using that word) simply because it's therapy.