When it rains, it pours!  Growing interest in FIT is leading to the publication of research articles on its application in different contexts — an article on using the ORS and SRS in smoking cessation treatment, another a long-awaited article on the validity and reliability of the Group Session Rating Scale, and finally, a piece written by me, Mark Hubble, Daryl Chow, and Jason Seidel for the 50th anniversary issue of the journal, Psychotherapy.  

Let’s start with the validity and reliability study.  Many clinicians have already downloaded and been using Group Session Rating Scale.  The measure is part of the packet of FIT tools available in 20+ languages on the International Center for Clinical Excellence website.   The article presents the first research on the validity and reliability of the measure.  The data for the study was gathered at two sites I’ve worked with for many years.  Thanks to Kelley Quirk and Jesse Owen for crunching the numbers and writing up the results!   Since the alliance is one of the most robust predictors of outcome, the GSRS provides yet another method for helping therapists obtain feedback from consumers of behavior health services.

Moving on, if there were a Nobel Prize for patience and persistence, it would have to go to Stephen Michaels, the lead author of the study, Assessing Counsellor Effects on Quit Rates and Life Satisfactions Scores at a Tobacco Quitline (Michael, Seltzer, Miller, and Wampold, 2012).  Stephen trained Quitline staff in FIT, implemented the ORS and SRS in Quitline tobacco cessation services, gathered outcome and alliance data on nearly 3,000 Quitline users, completed an in-depth review of the available smoking cessation literature, and finally, organized, analyzed, and written up the results.

What did he find?  Statistically significant differences in quit rates attributable to counselor effects.  In other words, as I’ve been saying for some time, some helpers are more helpful than others–even when the treatment provided is highly manualized and structured.  In short, it’s not the method that matters (including the use of the ORS and SRS), it’s the therapist.

What is responsible for the difference in effectiveness among therapists?  The answer to that question is the third article, The Outcome of Psychotherapy: Yesterday, Today, and Tomorrow.  In it, we review controversies surrounding the question, “What makes therapy work?” and tip findings from another, soon-to-be-published empirical analysis of top performing clinicians.  Stay tuned.