Day One: Thursday, September 8, 2011 Using Research to Enhance Routine Clinical Practice: Implications of Psychotherapy Research for Individual Practice and Service Design 9:30 Registration & Refreshments 10:00 The Effects of Psychotherapy and What to do About Them. Current status of psychotherapy as viewed from the perspective of psychotherapy research. Includes outcomes from clinical trials, effectiveness studies, comparative outcomes, empirically supported psychotherapies and the implications for practice. 10:30-How Research Can Improve Patient Outcome. What aspects of patient change should be measured and monitored during the course of psychotherapy? Why clinically significant change provides a foundation for clinical practice. 1) Measuring patient functioning 2) Classifying patient status 3) Classifying patient change 11.15 Introduction to outcome management methods: How outcome “lab tests” can improve outcomes for the non responding client. Preventing treatment failure through the use of signal-alarm warnings to psychotherapists and clients—easy to use software that provides instantaneous feedback to practitioners and clients. What shall we tell the client who is not progressing in psychotherapy? Predicting treatment failure and using this information. OQ – Analyst software. Problems and limitations 12:30 Lunch 13.15 Beyond progress feedback: Clinical Support Tools. Once practitioners are aware that a patient is predicted to leave treatment with a negative outcome problem solving tools can be helpful in turning around the course of treatment. In this system, problem solving is organized around a brief assessment of a few key constructs (alliance, expectations, social support) and suggested interventions. 15.10 Afternoon Tea 15.30 The consequences of feedback/clinical management: What does the research show about the effects of feedback to therapists and clients? 16.00 Discussants: John Mellor-Clark and Michael Barkham --Implications for practice in the UK 17.00 Adjourn Day Two, Friday September 9, 2011 The Individual Practitioner’s Contribution to Psychotherapy Outcome 9.00 Registration and refreshments 10:00 Variability in outcome as a function of the therapist. Are all therapists from Lake Woebegone? 11:00 Study of supershrinks and pseudoshrinks Efficient versus effective psychotherapists 11:30 Factors that contribute to successful psychotherapy outcome with an emphasis on the therapist’s contribution—the client, techniques, and the therapist 12:30 Lunch 13:15 Research findings on Facilitative Skills —Therapist interpersonal skills and difficult client presentations. Clinical vignettes will be shown and audience members asked to respond. Responses will be rated on the (FIT) Anderson scale. 15:00 Becoming an empirically-validated psychotherapist: The value of applying patient-focused research in psychotherapy practice. How to implement a feedback system and provide evidence that you are an “empirically-validated psychotherapist” 15:40 Afternoon tea 16:00 Discussants—Michael Barkham and John Mellor-Clark. Applications in the UK and future directions 17:00 Adjourn