Examination of Clinical Psychology Paper
Due 01-21-2018
Write a 1,050- to 1,400-word paper in which you examine clinical psychology.
Address the following items:
· Discuss the history and evolving nature of clinical psychology.
· Explain the role of research and statistics in clinical psychology.
· Discuss the differences between clinical psychology and other mental health professions, including social work, psychiatry, and school psychology.
Include a minimum of two sources from peer-reviewed publications.
Format your paper consistent with APA guidelines.
Plagiarism free
Rubric
1[OA] Signature Assignment: Examination of Clinical Psychology Paper1001Discuss the history and evolving nature of clinical psychology(25%)
Does Not Meet Expectations Did not explain or discuss the history and evolving nature of clinical psychology |
Approaches Expectations Identified some historical events in clinical psychology, but did not discuss or explain the significance of those events in the context of the evolving nature of clinical psychology |
Meets Expectations Explained or discussed the history and evolving nature of clinical psychology |
Exceeds Expectations Explained or discussed the history and evolving nature of clinical psychology in a clear, concise fashion using examples of innovators and theories that demonstrates the historical evolution of origins and techniques within the field |
2Explain the role of research and statistics in clinical psychology.(20%)
Does Not Meet Expectations
Did not identify or explain the role of research and statistics in clinical psychology |
Approaches Expectations
Identified some aspects of research in clinical psychology, but did not explain the role of research and statistics in clinical psychology |
Meets Expectations
Explained the role of research and statistics in clinical psychology |
Exceeds Expectations
Explained the role of research and statistics in clinical psychology in a clear, concise fashion using examples that demonstrate the relationship between data and application |
3Discuss the differences between clinical psychology and other mental health professions including social work, psychiatry, and school psychology(35%)
Does Not Meet Expectations
Did not explain or discuss the differences between clinical psychology and other mental health professions including social work, psychiatry, and school psychology |
Approaches Expectations
Identified key aspects of some mental health professions and clinical psychology, but did not discuss the significant differences between them. |
Meets Expectations
Discussed the differences between clinical psychology and other mental health professions including social work, psychiatry, and school psychology |
Exceeds Expectations
Discussed the differences between clinical psychology and other mental health professions including social work, psychiatry, and school psychology in a manner that draws notable comparisons and contrasts among them with clear, concise examples that specify limits and boundaries of theory and practice |
4Quality of written communication Write a 1050-1400 word paper with two peer-reviewed resources/references(10%)
Does Not Meet Expectations
The paper did not meet the minimum word count and did not include the required elements of the assignment. Inconsistent grammar, spelling and paragraphing throughout paper and inability to explain findings clearly. Surface errors are pervasive enough that they impede communication of meaning. |
Approaches Expectations
The paper may have met the minimum word count but lacked some of the required elements of the assignment. Adequate explanation of findings. Frequent and repetitive mechanical errors distract the reader. Inconsistencies in language, sentence structure, and/or word choice are present. |
Meets Expectations
The paper met the minimum word count and included all of the required elements of the assignment. Clear and logical written explanation of findings. Some mechanical errors or typos are present, but are not overly distracting to the reader. Correct sentence structure and audience-appropriate language are used. |
Exceeds Expectations
The paper met the minimum word count, included all of the required elements of the assignment, and provided some analysis and/or evaluation beyond the required elements of the assignment. Exceptionally concise written explanation of findings. Prose is free of mechanical errors. A variety of sentence structures and effective figures of speech are used. Writer is clearly in command of standard, written, academic English. |
5Use of APA Format/Style(10%)
Does Not Meet Expectations
APA format and style are not evident |
Approaches Expectations
Missing APA elements; in-text citations, where necessary, are used but formatted inaccurately and not referenced |
Meets Expectations
All key elements of an APA title page are present; In-text citations and a reference page are present with few format errors. Mechanics of writing are reflective of APA style |
Exceeds Expectations
A broad understanding of APA format and style is evident. Accurate citations and references are presented. No APA errors are evident |
PSY/480 Text
Chapter 1
As you can tell from this example, clinical
psychology is a complex field that
parallels the complexity of human behavior
and emotion. Just as we are defined by more
than blood and tissue, emotions and ideas, or
our relationships to others, the field of clinical
psychology is, by necessity, an integrative
effort to understand the interaction of the biological,
psychological, and social factors that
make each of us ‘‘tick.’’ Furthermore, modern
clinical psychology must respond to contemporary
issues that impact all of our lives. For
example, the importance of ethnicity, culture,
and gender in today’s society informs and
enriches the field of contemporary clinical
psychology as do current issues related to
economics, technology, ethics, and popular
culture.
As with medicine and other fields, the
roots of clinical psychology are viewed as
simplistic and narrowly conceived. However,
with scientific advancements and collaboration
between various fields and schools of
thought, contemporary clinical psychology
champions a sophisticated integration that
pulls together the best of these models for
optimal treatment, assessment, consultation,
and research.
Before describing the historical evolution
of clinical psychology into its contemporary
form, this chapter defines clinical psychology
and the varied roles and activities of
today’s clinical psychologist. In addition, the
integrative and evidence-based nature of contemporary
clinical psychology will be highlighted.
The purpose of this chapter is to
examine exactly what clinical psychology is all
about. I will define clinical psychology as well
as outline the educational process for clinical
psychologists, detail their typical roles and professional
activities, list the usual employment
settings, the various subspecialties within clinical
psychology, the professional organizations
of clinical psychology, and the similarities and
differences between clinical psychology and
What Is Contemporary Clinical Psychology? 5
related fields. Subsequent chapters will highlight
these issues (and others) in much more
detail. In doing so, a comprehensive and realistic
view of the field of clinical psychology
will be presented.
Throughout the course of this book, I discuss
the field of clinical psychology as understood
and practiced in the United States.
However, clinical psychology is recognized
and practiced in many other countries. The
American Psychological Association (APA),
the Canadian Psychological Association, and
the British Psychological Society, for example,
have more similarities than differences and
often host joint meetings and other professional
activities. The doctorate is the expected
level of training for psychologists in the United
States, Canada, and the United Kingdom.
Much of Europe and elsewhere do not require
doctoral training for clinical
psychologists.
Unfortunately, it is beyond the scope
of this book to detail the training, history,
and activities of clinical psychologists in other
countries. However, much of the information
presented is universally relevant to clinical
psychologists.
Definition and Inherent Intrigue
What could be more intriguing than human
behavior and interpersonal relationships in
all their complexity? A visit to any major
bookstore or a Google search of ‘‘psychology’’
reveals that topics such as clinical psychology,
self-help, and the general use of psychological
principles in understanding our lives are
enormously popular and pervasive. Hundreds
if not thousands of books are published each
year that focus on ways to better understand
human behavior, replete with methods
to improve psychological functioning as it
interacts with physical wellbeing, emotions,
and interpersonal relationships. Furthermore,
a popular television program during recent
years has been The Dr. Phil Show, a clinical
psychologist offering advice on numerous
wide-ranging topics for willing participants
and a national audience.
Although the independent discipline of
psychology is only about 100 years old,
psychology is one of the most popular current
undergraduate majors in most colleges and
universities. Furthermore, clinical psychology
is the most popular specialty area within
psychology (APA, 2009a, b; Norcross, Sayette,
& Mayne, 2008). Doctorates in psychology
are more common than any other doctoral
degree awarded in the United States with
the majority of psychology doctorates being
awarded in clinical psychology (APA, 2009a,
b; Norcross et al., 2008). The majority of
members of the APA list clinical psychology
as their area of specialization (APA, 2010a).
Additionally, being a clinical psychologist has
also made recent lists of ‘‘hottest jobs’’ by
Money magazine and other popular national
publications.
How is clinical psychology defined? Clinical
psychology focuses on the assessment, treatment,
and understanding of psychological and behavioral
problems and disorders. In fact, clinical
psychology focuses its efforts on the ways in
which the human psyche interacts with physical,
emotional, and social aspects of health and
dysfunction. According to the APA, clinical
psychology attempts to use the principles of
psychology to better understand, predict, and
alleviate ‘‘intellectual, emotional, biological,
psychological, social, and behavioral aspects
of human functioning’’ (APA, 2009a). Clinical
psychology is ‘‘the aspect of psychological science
and practice concerned with the analysis,
treatment, and prevention of human psychological
disabilities and with the enhancing of
personal adjustment and effectiveness’’ (Rodnick,
1985
, p. 1929). Thus, clinical psychology
uses what is known about the principles of
human behavior to help people with the numerous
troubles and concerns they experience
during the course of life in their relationships,
emotions, and physical selves. For example,
a clinical psychologist might evaluate a child
using intellectual and educational tests to determine
if the child has a learning disability or
an attentional problem that might contribute
to poor school performance. Another example
includes a psychologist who treats an adult
6 Foundations and Fundamentals
experiencing severe depression following a recent
divorce. People experiencing substance
and other addictions, hallucinations, compulsive
eating, sexual dysfunction, physical abuse,
suicidal impulses, and head injuries are a few
of the many problem areas that are of interest
to clinical psychologists.
Who is a clinical psychologist? Many people
with different types of training and experience
are involved with helping understand,
assess, and treat people with problems in
living. Counselors, nurses, psychiatrists, peer
helpers, and others are involved with the areas
of concern already listed. Clinical psychologists
‘‘have a doctoral degree from a regionally
accredited university or professional school
providing an organized, sequential clinical
psychology program in a department of psychology’’
(APA, 1981, p. 641). Although many
universities offer master’s degree training programs
in clinical psychology, the doctorate is
assumed to be the minimal level of training to
be considered a clinical psychologist. Clinical
psychology is not so much a specialty separate
from psychology, but is more a unique application
of psychology to the realm of emotional
and behavioral problems (APA 1987a, 2009a;
Matarazzo, 1987; Norcross et al., 2008).
Perspective and Philosophy
Clinical psychology uses the scientific method
to approach and understand human problems
in behavior, emotions, thinking, relationships,
and health. Rigorous scientific inquiry is used
to select and evaluate assessment and treatment
approaches and activities. Treatment
outcome research helps to determine which
treatments might be most effective for people
seeking help with particular clinical problems.
However, clinical psychology is both a science
and an art. Findings from scientific investigations
must be applied to the unique and special
needs of an individual, group, or organization.
What might be helpful to one person may not
be to another even if they both experience
the same diagnosis or problems. The science
of clinical psychology informs the art while
the art also informs the science. For example,
research findings from experiments on psychotherapy
outcomes are used to determine
which type of psychotherapy is most useful
with people experiencing depression, whereas
clinical experience working with people struggling
with depression is used to better design
and implement psychotherapy outcome research.
Contemporary clinical psychology
uses integrative
evidence-based approaches to understand
and address problems in
human
behavior.
While a wealth of individual perspectives
contribute important pieces of understanding
to the puzzle of human behavior, these pieces
must often be joined in novel ways to provide
the most complete and holistic perspective.
For example, advances in biology have
provided important knowledge about the role
of neurotransmitters in depression. Similarly,
personal variables such as history of loss and
trauma, as well as sociocultural factors such
as poverty, discrimination, and community
support in depression, are well appreciated.
Ultimately, an intelligent melding of these biological,
psychological, and social factors leads
to intervention strategies that best address
the complex needs of depressed individuals.
Therefore, this book emphasizes integrative
efforts to address human behavior, referring
to biopsychosocial factors throughout.
Although individual clinical psychologists
may be closely aligned with particular theoretical
perspectives on human behavior, most
contemporary clinical psychologists also appreciate
the integral roles of biopsychological
factors in
health and illness.
The biopsychosocial
perspective, an example of an integrative
approach, will be more fully described in
Chapter 6. To understand psychology’s roots
and gradual development into its present form
as an integrative endeavor, it is important to
keep in mind the impact of biopsychosocial
issues simply as the interplay of relevant biological,
psychological, and social factors in
human behavior.
Research and practice in clinical psychology
has found that certain approaches to
understanding and treating problems may
What Is Contemporary Clinical Psychology? 7
be especially useful for certain people and
problems while different approaches might
be most helpful for others. For example,
some people who experience depression respond
well to medication while others respond
to cognitive-behavioral psychotherapy. Others
respond well to supportive therapies such
as the humanistic approach. Still others respond
to a combination of these and other
approaches. Although medication might be
useful to treat someone with depression, family
therapy, vocational counseling, and group
social skills training may enhance treatment
success.
Many people who seek the services of a
clinical psychologist often have several problems
or diagnoses occurring at the same time.
For example, the person who experiences
depression may also suffer from a chronic
illness, a personality disorder, a learning disability,
alcohol troubles, and marital discord.
Furthermore, stressful life events, intellectual
functioning, ethnic background, religious orientation,
and other factors contribute to the
manifestation of the depressive disorder and
other problems. One theoretical orientation
alone may not address the complexity of the
person seeking help. Although various clinical
psychologists may be closely aligned with one
particular theoretical or philosophical orientation,
most contemporary clinical psychologists
believe that problems in human behavior are
multidimensional. They use an integrative and
evidence-based approach that suggests that interacting
causal factors generally contribute to
human problems and that a multidimensional
approach is usually needed to tackle these issues.
Thus, many factors may contribute to
human problems and a selection of factors
must be utilized to help alleviate these concerns.
Today, many clinical psychologists use
an integrative evidence-based perspective that
maintains a biopsychosocial orientation.
The biopsychosocial perspective emphasizes
the interaction of biological, psychological,
and social influences on behavior and
psychological functioning. Each must be carefully
considered and the individual viewed
in a broader biopsychosocial context in order
to best understand the complexities of human
behavior and the most effective means of intervention
(Borrell-Carrio´ , Suchman, & Epstein,
2004; Engel, 1977, 1980; N. Johnson, 2003;
G. E. Schwartz, 1982, 1984). Although clinical
psychologists may not be able to intervene
at the biological, psychological, or social level,
they must take into consideration these influencing
factors in understanding and treating
people who seek their services. For example,
psychologists cannot prescribe medication in
most states, conduct physical examinations,
or offer surgery to their patients. They cannot
alter ethnic, religious, socioeconomic, or
cultural backgrounds. However, clinical psychologists
can work to understand these influences
on behavior and clinical problems
and can consult with others who can provide
additional services such as medication management,
surgery, and spiritual and religious
direction.
The biopsychosocial approach is a systemic
perspective (Borrell-Carrio´ et al., 2004;
Schwartz, 1982, 1984); that is, changes in one
area of functioning will likely impact functioning
in other areas. The fluid and systemic
nature of the biopsychosocial approach highlights
the mutual interdependence of each
system on each of the other systems. For
example, feelings of depression may be associated
with brain neurochemicals, interpersonal
conflicts, disappointments in life, stresses at
home and at work, unrealistic expectations,
cultural context, and many other interacting
factors. Someone might be genetically
or biologically vulnerable to depression due
to brain chemistry. Stressful life events such
as a divorce, illness, or job loss may trigger
a depressive episode. Feelings of depression
may result in poor work performance, social
isolation, feelings of hopelessness, and lower
self-esteem, which may deepen the depression
as well as trigger brain chemistry that
in turn further worsens the depression. Educational,
cultural, socioeconomic, and other
factors might influence whatever treatment,
if any, is pursued by the depressed person.
Treatment success may be influenced by both
patient and therapist motivation, expectations,
8 Foundations and Fundamentals
and comfort with the treatment plan. The
biopsychosocial model has been endorsed as
the preferred approach to understanding and
treating health-related problems and issues by
the APA (Borrell-Carri ´o et al., 2004; Fava &
Sonino, 2008; Johnson, 2003) and other organizations
(Institute for the Future, 2000).
Details on theoretical orientations and the
biopsychosocial perspective will be discussed
more fully in Chapters 5 and 6.
Education and Training
Few people are aware of the long and intensive
training process that is involved in becoming a
clinical psychologist. Most do not realize that
the training process includes experimental research
as well as clinical training in psychological
testing and psychotherapy. Although master’s
degrees are awarded in clinical psychology
as well as other areas of applied psychology
(e.g., school psychology), the doctorate is considered
the minimal educational requirement
to become a clnical psychologist (APA, 1987b).
Finally, mandatory training continues even
beyond the doctorate. The road to becoming
a clinical psychologist is a long one divided
by a number of distinct stages and phases
that include college, graduate school, clinical
internship, postdoctoral fellowship, licensure,
and finally employment, continuing education,
and advanced certification. Although a
brief overview of the training process is presented
here, details of the training of clinical
psychologists are outlined in Chapter 15.
Students interested in becoming clinical
psychologists and gaining admission to quality
graduate programs must take their college
experience very seriously. Completing courses
in psychology, research design, and statistics
as well as having excellent grades, Graduate
Record Examination (GRE) scores, and highquality
research and clinical experience during
the college years are important.
Graduate training in clinical psychology
involves coursework as well as clinical and
research experiences and training. Graduate
school in clinical psychology takes at least
five years to complete, including a one-year
clinical internship. However, many students
find that they need more than five years to
complete their graduate education. Dissertation
projects and other factors often extend
the training process to an average of six to
eight years. A student interested in obtaining
a doctorate in clinical psychology can choose
between two types of degrees: the traditional
PhD (Doctor of Philosophy) or the PsyD
(Doctor of Psychology). Although the APA
recommends a core curriculum of courses and
activities (APA, 1987b, 2009a; Norcross et al.,
2008), each program maintains its own unique
orientation based on the faculty and traditions
of the
program.
In researching graduate programs,
you will find that each program has its
own unique balance on emphasizing the roles
of biological, psychological, and social
factors
in human behavior.
Almost all graduate training programs
in clinical psychology require that students
complete a one-year, full-time (or two-year,
part-time) clinical internship prior to being
awarded the doctorate. The internship is
the most focused clinical training experience
generally available during graduate training.
The training usually occurs in hospitals,
clinics, or various clinical settings throughout
the United States and Canada. The activities
during the clinical internship focus specifically
on clinical training, such as the practice of
psychotherapy, psychological testing, and
consultation activities with a variety of patient
or client populations.
Most states now require one to two years
of postdoctoral training and supervision before
you are eligible to take the national and
state licensing examinations. However, nine
states (e.g., Washington, Ohio, Arizona, Connecticut)
allow students who have already
secured two years of supervised training to
obtain their license without a postdoctoral fellowship
year. Postdoctoral training occurs in
a wide variety of settings, including hospitals,
clinics, counseling centers, universities, and
even private practices. Postdoctoral training
can include clinical work as well as research,
teaching, and other professional activities.
What Is Contemporary Clinical Psychology? 9
SPOTLIGHT
Dr. Phil, Dr. Laura, Dr. Drew, and Other ‘‘Psychology’’
Celebrity Personalities
Phillip McGraw (aka Dr. Phil) has received a great deal of attention
during the past decade due to his highly successful television show.
Started in September 2002, it quickly became the highest rating new
syndicated television show in 16 years. Prior to The Dr. Phil Show, he
regularly appeared on the Oprah Winfrey Show starting in 1998, acting
as an expert on relationships, life strategies, and behavior. Dr. Phil is,
unlike many other well-known ‘‘psychology’’ celebrity personalities such
as Dr. Laura (Schlessinger), Dr. John Gray, and Dr. Drew (Pinsky), a clinical
psychologist and was licensed as a psychologist in Texas. He obtained his
PhD in clinical psychology from the University of North Texas and opened
a clinical practice in 1979. Dr. Phil is a clinical psychologist who uses
his professional training and skill to host his popular television show and
write popular books on relationship issues, weight loss, and so forth.
Unlike Dr. Phil, Dr. Laura (Laura Schlessinger) is not a clinical
psychologist or a psychologist at all. Her PhD degree is in physiology
from Columbia University. Although she has received training in marriage
and family therapy at the University of Southern California, she is not a
licensed psychologist. The same is true for John Gray, PhD. He is the wellknown
author of the popular Men Are from Mars and Women Are from Venus
books published by HarperCollins. He is neither a clinical psychologist,
nor a licensed psychologist. Dr. Drew Pinsky is an internal medicine
physician (neither a psychologist, nor a psychiatrist) and is a frequent
guest on television news and entertainment shows as well as hosting the
popular shows, Celebrity Rehab with Dr. Drew and the radio and television
advice show, Loveline. Many other ‘‘psychology’’ celebrities frequently
seen in television and print media, such as Cooper Lawrence and Dr. Jenn
Berman, are also neither licensed psychologists nor clinical psychologists.
Regardless of what you think about these well-known psychology
personalities, their popularity speaks to the remarkable interest the general
population has in the use of applied psychology to help people solve life
problems, improve relationships, and live better lives.
Each state offers appropriately trained psychologists
an opportunity to acquire a license
to practice psychology and offer professional
services to the public. Licensing attempts to
protect the public from untrained or unethical
practitioners helps to protect the integrity
of the profession by offering minimum standards
of care. All states use the same national
written examination for licensing (i.e.,
the Examination for Professional Practice in
Psychology, EPPP). After successful completion
of the written examination, many states
then require an oral (or sometimes an essay)
examination before obtaining the
license.
Following licensure, most states require continuing
education in order to renew the psychology
license.
After being awarded the doctorate, a clinical
psychologist is eligible to become a diplomate,
an advanced level of certification. This diploma
10 Foundations and Fundamentals
is an optional post-licensing certification that
reflects advanced competency in a subspecialty
area of professional practice. The American
Board of Professional Psychology (ABPP) acts
as the credentialing agency for psychology
diplomates in a variety of specialty areas (e.g.,
clinical psychology, counseling psychology,
neuropsychology, school psychology, health
psychology).
Activities
Clinical psychologists certainly do more than
talk to people who are distressed about personal
matters. Clinical psychologists often do
vastly different types of activities, from teaching
to psychotherapy to laboratory research.
Clinical psychologists also may be involved
in a wide range of professional activities including
teaching at the college or university
level, conducting independent and/or collaborative
research, providing consultation to
a variety of professionals and organizations,
conducting psychotherapy, and providing psychological
assessment and diagnostic services.
Clinical psychologists work in a plethora of
environments such as universities, hospitals,
clinics, schools, businesses, government agencies,
military institutions, and private or group
practices. These varied roles and settings often
assist the clinical psychologist in appreciating
multidimensional factors and integrating key
approaches into his or her work.
Research
Research is at the foundation of all clinical
psychology activities. Research conducted by
psychologists or others in the behavioral sciences
provides the basis and direction for all
professional activities. Clinical psychologists
often conduct and publish a wide variety of
research studies. Research programs help to
determine which assessment or treatment approach
might be most effective for a particular
clinical problem such as depression, anxiety,
eating disorders, or substance abuse problems.
Projects may help identify those at risk
for the development of certain psychological
problems. Other projects might evaluate methods
to better determine clinical diagnoses. The
types of research activities conducted by clinical
psychologists are extremely diverse.
Most psychologists who are actively engaged
in research are faculty members at
colleges, universities, or medical schools.
They, like faculty in other academic disciplines,
may conduct research on a wide range
of subject areas, publish their findings in professional
journals, and present their research
at international, national, and regional professional
conferences. Psychologists who are not
academic faculty members at colleges or universities
might also conduct research at their
hospitals, clinics, government agencies (e.g.,
National Institute of Mental Health), industry
(e.g., pharmaceutical companies, psychological
testing companies, managed care insurance
companies), or private practices. Research in
clinical psychology encompasses biological,
psychological, and social aspects of human behavior,
from research exploring neuroimaging
techniques, to ethnic factors in hypertension,
to spiritual aspects of love and intimacy.
Although not all clinical psychologists conduct
and publish their own research, all are
expected to be constant consumers of research
in order to inform their professional activities.
Clinical psychologists must understand
the research findings of others in order to improve
their own professional activities. Many
regularly read professional journals that cover
research topics of special interest.
Assessment
Many clinical psychologists use psychological
tests and procedures to assess or diagnose various
psychiatric (e.g., depression, psychosis,
personality disorders, dementia) as well as
non-psychiatric issues (e.g., relationship conflicts,
learning differences, educational potential,
career interests, and skills). Generally,
psychologists are the only mental health professionals
who administer psychological tests.
In fact, clinical psychologists not only conduct
What Is Contemporary Clinical Psychology? 11
SPOTLIGHT
Terrorism and Its Aftermath
The horrific terrorist events of September 11, 2001, in the United States
that claimed the lives of approximately 3,000 people have had enormous
implications for life
in America
and elsewhere. In many ways, life in the
United States is very different after September 11 than it was before that
fateful day. The new U.S. Department of Homeland Security and Congress
altered the way foreign students and visitors to the United States are
screened and evaluated. Laws and transportation policies and procedures
have been greatly changed in an attempt to increase security. Air travel
security procedures, for example, have changed dramatically following
September 11. Wars in Afghanistan and Iraq commenced with thousands
of military young people being shipped overseas and, tragically, many
did not return home. Many people from Islamic countries or religious
traditions have experienced prejudice and suspicion.
Clinical psychology has been involved with the response to terrorism
in the United States in a number of different ways. Immediately following
the terrorism events and since, psychologists have counseled those who
lost loved ones in the tragedy as well as those terribly stressed by the
events. For example, airplane phobias have always been treated by
clinical psychologists. Yet, following the terrorism events, the need for
this type of specialized counseling increased a great deal. Children and
others in the New York and Washington areas (as well as elsewhere)
experienced posttraumatic stress symptoms, such as anxiety and sleep
disturbances, that needed treatment and consultation (Cormer & Kendall,
2007). Furthermore, clinical psychologists and others have been involved
in research to help better understand the causes and risk factors for terrorist
acts as well as the psychological consequences for those impacted by these
events (e.g., Eidelson & Eidelson, 2003; La Greca, 2007; Moghaddam &
Marsella, 2004; Post, 2007; Pyszczynski, Solomon, & Greenberg, 2003).
For example, Eidelson and Eidelson (2003) have examined research on
what propels
groups
toward conflict and violence that has many useful
implications for understanding and hopefully preventing terrorism. They
have highlighted five ‘‘dangerous ideas [that include] superiority, injustice,
vulnerability, distrust, and helplessness’’ (p. 182) that act as risk factors
for conflict and violence.
Superiority refers to the belief and conviction that a person or group is
better than everyone else in a variety of important ways. For example,
someone might believe that they or their group are the only ones who
have a clear understanding of God’s will and plan. This belief has certainly
caused wars, terrorism, mass killings, and so forth for thousands of years.
This perspective is rather narcissistic in that someone or a group believes
that they have some special information, entitlement, or gifts that others
do not have or can’t have access to obtain. Injustice and victimization refer
to the belief that the person or group has been badly mistreated by specific
(continued)
12 Foundations and Fundamentals
others or the world in general. Although injustice and victimization
have been common human experiences since the dawn of time, this
perspective can lead (and has led) to retaliatory acts and rage against
others. Vulnerability refers to the notion that a person or group is highly
likely to experience danger or further victimization and that hypervigilance
and preemptive acts are needed to reduce the risk of further harm. Distrust
refers to the belief that very few people can be trusted and that only the
inner circle of true believers can be considered appropriate and trustworthy
group members. This point of view leads to paranoia and potential
misunderstandings attributing benign others as hostile and malevolent.
Finally, helplessness refers to feelings of powerlessness and dependency
that often become overly pessimistic and negative. This perspective can
lead to extreme measures to help feel more in control and more powerful.
These five dangerous beliefs can be applied to the actions of many conflicts
between nations and peoples as well as to the terrorism experienced in
America on September 11, 2001, and elsewhere. Many countries have
been dealing with terrorism for a long time. For example, Ireland, the
United Kingdom, Israel, and many other areas of the world have regularly
had to deal with terrorism for many years. Lessons learned from these
countries can be applied to the current concerns in the United States.
Psychologists in these other locations have studied and counseled those
affected by terrorism for many years.
Clinical psychology has much to offer in our efforts to help those
touched by terrorism as well as to help us better understand the factors
that contribute to such horrific violence perpetrated against others (Cormer
& Kendall, 2007).
psychological evaluations with individuals to
assess intellectual, educational, personality,
and neuropsychological functioning, but also
assess groups of people (e.g., families) and
even organizations.
There are numerous components to psychological
assessment, including cognitive,
personality, behavioral, neuropsychological,
and observational measures. For example, a
neuropsychologist may be called on to evaluate
an urban Latino adolescent boy for temporal
lobe epilepsy, which often results in impulsive
behavior and aggression. Neuroimaging
techniques conducted by a physician will augment
the findings, as well as a developmental
history, to rule out personality or environmental
factors such as trauma as causal in
the behavioral manifestations of the disorder.
Thus, while focusing on neuropsychological
measures, the psychologist needs to be keenly
aware of medical, psychological, and social
factors that may contribute to or otherwise
explain ‘‘seizure-like’’ symptomology.
Integration in assessment will be more fully
explored in conjunction with its component
elements in Chapters 7 and 8. An extremely
challenging and exciting area of clinical psychology,
assessment requires the psychologist
to be something of a psychological sleuth, utilizing
an arsenal of tools in determining subtle
and often hidden problems and syndromes in
the context of biological, psychological, and
sociocultural factors.
Treatment
Contemporary psychological interventions address
a tremendous range of human problems
What Is Contemporary Clinical Psychology? 13
through a diversity of approaches. Psychotherapy
may involve individuals, couples, families,
and groups, and address an endless array of
target problems. Anxiety, phobias, depression,
shyness, physical illness, loss, trauma, drug
addiction, eating difficulties, sexuality concerns,
hallucinations, relationship problems,
and work difficulties may all prompt individuals
to seek psychological treatment. Furthermore,
it has become increasingly incumbent
upon psychologists to become educated and
sensitized to cultural factors in treating clients,
as well as the entire spectrum of individual
differences (e.g., sexual preference, religious
faith, disabilities, ethnic identities, economic
status) that comprise today’s mosaic society.
Various treatment approaches and theoretical
models are utilized to treat psychological
and behavioral problems. Most psychologists
use an eclectic strategy, defined as integrating
a variety of perspectives and clinical approaches
in their treatment (Norcross, 2009;
Norcross & Goldfried, 2005; Norcross, Karg,
& Prochaska, 1997a, b; Weston, 2000). Others
tend to specialize in one of a number of
treatment approaches, such as psychoanalysis,
family therapy, or hypnosis. The major theoretical
schools of thought in psychology are
psychodynamic, cognitive behavioral, humanistic/
existential, and family systems. Each of
these theoretical orientations or perspectives
is discussed in detail in Chapter 4, leading
to our current understanding of integrative
models.
Efforts to develop empirically supported or
evidence-based treatments to assist clinicians
and researchers in providing structured treatments
and the use of treatment manuals
that are based on treatment outcome research
findings have received a great deal of attention
and support from the APA and others
(Addis, 2002; APA Presidential Task Force
on Evidence-Based Practice, 2006; Becker,
Stice, Shaw, & Woda, 2009; Chambless &
Ollendick, 2001; Crits-Christoph, Chambless,
Brody, & Karp, 1995; Lamberg, 2008; Sanderson
& Woody, 1995). Empirically supported
treatments hinge on the notion that psychological
treatment approaches should always
be based on solid empirical research data
and supported by professional organizations
such as the APA (APA Presidential Task Force
on Evidence-Based Practice, 2006; Chambless
& Hollon, 1998). Empirically supported
treatment approaches are manualized treatments
and have been developed for a variety of
clinical problems such as depression (Cornes &
Frank, 1994; Cuipers, van Straten, & Warmerdam,
2007; Hollon & Beck, 1994; Lamberg,
2008), anxiety (Landon & Barlow, 2004; Newman
& Borkovec, 1995), conduct disordered
children (Feldman & Kazdin, 1995; Schmidt
& Taylor, 2002), and pain control (Chou &
Huffman, 2007; Hawkins, 2001). The Clinical
Psychology Division of the American Psychological
Association (The Society of Clinical
Psychology, Division 12) maintains a web site
(www.PsychologyTreatments.org) that keeps
updated information including clinical and
research references for state-of-the-art empirically
supported treatments. For example, cognitive
and interpersonal psychotherapy have
been determined to be empirically supported
treatments for both depression and bulimia
while exposure and response prevention have
been found to be an empirically supported
treatment for obsessive-compulsive disorder
(APA Presidential Task Force on Evidence-
Based Practice, 2006; Chambless & Ollendick,
2001; Crits-Christoph et al., 1995). While
many treatment approaches are based on research
support, the concept of empirically supported
treatments and evidence-based practice
is the most recent effort to systematize service
delivery to carefully studied populations
and problems (APA Presidential Task Force
on Evidence-Based Practice, 2006; Chambless
& Hollon, 1998; Nathan & Gorman, 2007).
Controversy exists over the development of
‘‘approved’’ treatment approaches for various
clinical problems, with critics usually
highlighting the challenges of applying research
findings to complex clinical situations
(APA Presidential Task Force on Evidence-
Based Practice, 2006; Cooper, 2003; Ingram,
Hayes, & Scott, 2000; Messer, 2004). These
issues will be further discussed in detail in
Chapter 14.
14 Foundations and Fundamentals
Teaching
Clinical psychologists teach in a variety of
settings.
Some are full-time professors in colleges
and universities across the United States
and elsewhere. These professionals teach undergraduates,
graduate students, and/or postgraduate
students.
Other psychologists might
teach on a part-time basis at local colleges
and universities as adjunct professors or lecturers.
Still others might teach by providing
one-on-one clinical supervision of graduate
students, interns, or postdoctoral fellows.
During supervision, psychologists discuss the
trainees’ clinical cases in depth while providing
therapeutic guidance as they learn
psychotherapy, psychological evaluation, and
consultation skills. Teaching may occur in
hospitals, clinics, or business environments
as well. For example, a clinical psychologist
might offer a stress management course
for attorneys, business executives, nurses,
clergy, police officers, or others. A psychologist
might also teach a workshop on intimate
relationships to young couples about
to be married. A psychologist might teach
other professionals such as doctors or clergy
how to better maintain professional boundaries
or understand psychopathology among
the persons they counsel. As in psychological
treatment facilities, there are numerous
examples and opportunities for psychologists
to teach in a wide variety of professional
settings.
Highlight of a Contemporary Clinical Psychologist
Patrick
H. DeLeon
, PhD, ABPP
Photo: Courtesy Patrick
H. DeLeon
Dr. DeLeon uses his training and skills as a clinical psychologist by working
on Capitol Hill. He helps shape policy and legislation that best reflects
both the science and application of clinical
psychology.
He is a former
president of the American Psychological Association.
Birth Date: January 6, 1943
College: Amherst College (BA, Liberal Arts), 1964
Graduate Program: Purdue University (MS, Psychology), 1966; Purdue
University (PhD, Clinical Psychology), 1969; University of Hawaii (MPH,
Health Services Administration), 1973; Catholic University, Columbus
School of Law (JD), 1980
Clinical Internship: Fort Logan Mental Health Center, Denver, Colorado
Current Job: Chief of Staff, U.S. Senator D. K. Inouye, United States
Senate
Pros and Cons of Being a Clinical Psychologist:
Pros: ‘‘Substantive knowledge about people, systems, health care, etc.’’
Cons: ‘‘Most psychologists or psychology colleagues do not appreciate
how little they know about public policy and national trends.’’
Future of Clinical Psychology: ‘‘The knowledge base will continue
to expand; whether services are provided by psychologists or other
professionals is an open question. Psychology controls its own destiny—to
not seek new agendas and to not address society’s needs means to be
replaced by other professions.’’
What Is Contemporary Clinical Psychology? 15
Changes during the Past 5 to 7 Years: ‘‘We
have developed a significantly broader focus
and thus have brought the behavioral sciences
to a wider range of activities, especially within
the generic health-care arena. As our numbers
have increased, we have developed a
greater presence (i.e., influence) in defining
quality care and health-care priorities. Significantly
more colleagues are now personally
active within the public policy and political
process, thus ensuring that psychology’s voice
(and values) will be heard. The development
of postdoctoral training positions has resulted
in society developing a greater appreciation for
the importance of the psychosocial aspects of
health care. Clearly, the prescription privileges
agenda and advances in communications technology
will revolutionize all of mental health
care delivery.’’
What do you think will be the major
changes in clinical psychology during the
next several years? ‘‘The prescription privilege
agenda will continue to expand and
thereby absolutely redefine quality mental
health care. Advances in the technology and
communications fields will be found to have
direct applicability to health care and psychology
will play a major role in addressing
this challenge. Health care will become more
patient-centered and interdisciplinary in nature.
No longer will any of the health-care
professions be allowed to foster isolated or
‘silo-oriented’ training modules. The percentage
of women in the field will continue to
increase. And, clinical protocols will focus concretely
on special populations (such as the
elderly, children, and various ethnic minority
clients). Health care will become more accountable
and data driven. Distance learning
and virtual training programs will become the
norm.’’
Typical Schedule: ‘‘Every day brings new
and unexpected challenges and opportunities.
One tries to visit with a committee staff person
each day or with a colleague in another senate
office or from the administration. The key to
legislative success is to anticipate which bills
will be moving long before they do and to
convince relevant committee staff (or administration,
including house aides) to incorporate
provisions addressing one’s vision. Listening to
and interacting with Hawaii constituents and
professional lobbyists provides an excellent
opportunity to develop legislative agendas. For
Hawaii, expanding the resources for federally
qualified community health centers provides
an excellent vehicle for expanding psychology’s
agenda.’’
Consultation
Many clinical psychologists provide consultation
to churches, health-care professionals,
businesspersons, schools, lawmakers, organizations,
and even to other mental health
professionals.
Consultation might involve
an informal discussion, a brief report, or
a more ongoing and formal consultation
arrangement. For example, companies might
consult with a psychologist to help reduce
coworker conflicts or provide stress management
strategies for high-stress employees such
as business executives, firefighters, police
officers, or prison guards. Consultation might
involve helping a physician to better manage
patient noncompliance with unpleasant medical
procedures. Consultation could include
working with a religious superior in helping
to better select applicants who wish to enter
a religious order or become a clergy member.
Consultation might include working with
law enforcement professionals on violence
prevention or screening applications for the
police academy. Clinical psychologists provide
professional consultation in a wide variety of
settings using a range of
techniques.
Consultation
might also include assessment, teaching,
research, and brief psychotherapy activities.
Administration
Many clinical psychologists find themselves
(intentionally or unintentionally) in
16 Foundations and Fundamentals
administrative positions. Administrative duties
might include serving as chairperson of a
psychology department, or dean, provost, or
even president of a college or university.
Other psychologists might hold administrative
positions in hospitals, mental health clinics,
or other agencies. They may act as a unit
chief directing a psychiatric hospital unit or
ward, or directing mental health services
for a community mental health clinic. They
may act as directors of training in numerous
clinical settings. Some psychologists have
become members of Congress and even state
governors (e.g., Ted Strickland in Ohio). In
administration, these psychologists generally
manage a budget, lead a multidisciplinary
professional and support staff, make hiring
and firing decisions, develop policies and
procedures for clinical, research, or other
operations, and manage a large and populous
state such as Ohio.
Employment Settings
Clinical psychologists work in many different
employment settings including hospitals,
medical schools, outpatient clinics,
colleges
and universities, businesses and industry, and
private or group practices. Many clinical psychologists
work in some type of part-time or
full-time private practice as well (Norcross et
al., 2008; Norcross, Hedges, & Castle, 2002).
Following private practice, teaching in colleges
and universities is the second most common
employment choice for clinical psychologists
(APA, 2000a, 2009b, 2010a, b; Norcross et
al., 2002, 2008). Many psychologists work
in more than one setting, combining various
positions and activities. For example, it
is common for a clinical psychologist to work
at a hospital or clinic several days a week,
teach a course or two at a local college or
university, and conduct a private practice one
or more days each week. A clinical psychologist
may be a full-time professor teaching and
conducting research while also operating a
small private practice and offering consultation
services to various clinics, hospitals, or businesses.
The diversity of experiences available
to psychologists is quite appealing and offers
tremendous flexibility and options.
Private or Group Practices
About 35% of clinical psychologists primarily
work in solo or group private practices
(APA, 2010a, b; Norcross et al., 2008; Norcross,
Karpiak, & Santoro, 2005; Norcross,
Prochaska, & Gallagher, 1989). Professionals
in private practice may provide clinical services
in their own solo practice or in conjunction
with other mental health or health-care practitioners
in a multidisciplinary setting. However,
clinical psychologists who offer psychotherapy
service tend to do so in private practice
environments (Norcross et al., 2005, 2008).
Many psychologists are drawn to independently
providing direct clinical, consultation,
and other professional services to their own
patients and clients and enjoy being their own
boss and setting their own hours and policies.
In fact, private practitioners report more job
satisfaction (Norcross et al., 1997, 2005, 2008;
Norcross & Prochaska, 1988) and less job stress
than psychologists employed in other settings
such as academia (e.g., Boice & Myers, 1987).
However, significant changes in health-care
reform, managed health care, and insurance
reimbursement for psychological services are
likely to alter this rosy view of private practice
for many professionals in the future. Many private
practice psychologists, along with other
mental health and health-care professionals
operating practices, have experienced reductions
in profits and freedoms as a result of the
changing health-care industry.
In fact, some authors have predicted for
quite some time that solo private practice
may no longer exist in the future (Cummings,
1995). Cummings predicted that these clinicians
will be employed primarily in multidisciplinary
health settings such as health maintenance
organizations (HMOs) or very large and
comprehensive medical group practices. Others
disagree with Cummings’ pessimistic view
concerning the future of private practice, stating
that managed care accounts for a minority
What Is Contemporary Clinical Psychology? 17
of the fees collected by private practitioners.
Furthermore, the percentage of psychologists
engaged in at least part-time private practice
has not decreased even several decades after
the onset of managed health care and other
health-care changes and, as of this writing in
2010, private practice is still alive and well
for many professionals (APA, 2000a, 2009b,
2010a, b; Norcross et al., 2002, 2005, 2008).
Colleges and Universities
About 20% of clinical psychologists are
employed in academic environments (APA,
1993a, 1997, 2000a, 2010a, b; Norcross et al.,
1997a, b, 2002, 2005, 2008). Most of these
psychologists work as professors at colleges
and universities across the United States and
Canada. They generally teach psychology
courses, supervise the clinical and/or research
work of psychology students, and conduct
both independent and collaborative research.
They also typically serve on various college or
university committees, providing leadership
and assistance with the academic community.
Some clinical psychologists work in academic
clinical settings, such as student counseling
centers, providing direct clinical services to
students.
Hospitals
Many clinical psychologists work in hospital
settings (APA, 2009b, 2010). They may
conduct psychological testing; provide individual,
family, or group psychotherapy; act as
a consultant to other mental health or medical
professionals on psychiatric or general medical
hospital units; and may serve in administrative
roles, such as unit chief, on a psychiatric
ward. Many states now allow psychologists to
become full members of the medical staff of
hospitals. The CAPP v. Rank decision in California,
for example, allowed psychologists to have
full admitting, discharge, and treatment privileges
at appropriate California hospitals. Full
medical staff privileges allow psychologists to
treat their patients when they are hospitalized
and allow psychologists to participate in hospital
committees, including holding elected positions.
The majority of psychologists working
in hospital settings are affiliated with Veterans
Administration (VA) hospitals. In fact, the majority
of internship training sites are located in
VA hospitals (Association of Psychology Postdoctoral
and Internship Centers, 2009).
Medical Schools
Some hospitals and medical centers are affiliated
with medical schools. In addition to
the professional hospital activities mentioned
previously, clinical psychologists serve on the
faculties of many medical schools. They typically
act as ‘‘clinical faculty,’’ which generally
involves several hours (i.e., two to four) per
week of pro bono time contributed to training
medical center trainees. These trainees might
include psychiatry residents, other medical
residents and fellows (e.g., pediatric residents),
medical students, nursing students, or nonmedical
hospital trainees such as psychology
interns or postdoctoral fellows, social work interns,
nursing students, or chaplaincy interns.
These psychologists might teach a seminar or
provide individual case supervision and consultation.
Psychologists may also serve as academic
or research faculty at medical schools.
In fact, approximately 3,000 psychologists are
employed as faculty in medical schools (APA,
2009b; Pate, 2004; Sweet, Rozensky, & Tovian,
1991). These psychologists tend to primarily
conduct research and are often funded by national
grants (e.g., National Institute of Mental
Health, National Science Foundation, American
Heart Association) to pay their salaries,
thus allowing them to conduct their research.
Finally, many psychologists employed in medical
school settings evaluate, treat, and consult
on patient care, and others teach and train
both medical and nonmedical students.
Outpatient Clinics
Many clinical psychologists work in various
outpatient clinics such as community
mental health centers (APA, 2009b). These
18 Foundations and Fundamentals
psychologists often provide a range of clinical
services to other professionals and organizations.
For example, these psychologists might
provide psychotherapy for children who have
been abused or group therapy for adult substance
abusers. They might also provide parent
education classes. While psychologists in these
settings may conduct research, direct clinical
service is often the primary activity and priority
of these settings.
Business and Industry
Many clinical psychologists working in business
and industry settings offer consultation
services to management and assessment
and brief psychotherapy to employees, and
conduct research on various psychosocial
issues important to company functioning and
performance (APA, 2009b). For example,
these psychologists might consult with the
human resources department, provide stress
management workshops, or conduct interpersonal
skills–building workshops. Psychologists
might help managers learn to improve
their ability to motivate and supervise their
employees. They may also assist in developing
strategies for interviewing and hiring job
applicants. They may help groups develop
mission, value, and strategic plans.
Military
Many clinical psychologists are employed by
one of the branches of the U.S. military such
as the navy, air force, or army (APA, 2009b).
They often provide direct clinical services.
Some conduct research while others act as
administrators in military hospitals and clinics.
Typically, psychologists working in the military
hold an officer rank such as captain. Other
psychologists are civilians working in military
hospitals such as VA hospitals. In fact, since
World War II, VA hospitals have been among
the largest employers of clinical psychologists.
Other Locations
Clinical psychologists are also employed in
a variety of other settings, such as police
departments, prisons, juvenile halls and detention
centers, rehabilitation centers for disabled
children and/or adults, substance abuse
and/or mental illness halfway houses, battered
women’s shelters, seminaries, schools, and
many other work environments. These psychologists
provide a wide range of professional
services such as psychological assessment, consultation,
and counseling.
Subspecialties
Most clinical psychologists are trained in the
research, assessment, and treatment of a variety
of clinical issues pertaining to a diverse
set of client populations. The core curriculum
for all clinical psychologists includes coursework
on the biological, social, cognitive, and
individual influences on behavior as well as
classes on research, statistics, ethics, assessment,
and treatment. The core curriculum
can then be applied, with additional specialty
training, to various populations such
as children and adults. Further training may
be offered in many subspecialty areas. Although
a core set of competencies are expected
from all clinical psychologists, not all clinical
psychologists are trained exactly alike. Many
clinical psychologists ultimately specialize in
one or more areas of research or practice.
Just as medicine offers doctors various specialties
such as pediatrics, oncology, psychiatry,
internal medicine, and cardiology, there are
many clinical psychology subspecialties. Some
of the most common specialties include child
clinical psychology, clinical health psychology,
clinical neuropsychology, forensic psychology,
and geropsychology. Furthermore, each specialty
includes a variety of subspecialties. For
example, child clinical psychologists might
specialize in working with very young children
or adolescents. Clinical health psychologists
might choose to specialize in eating disorders,
anxiety disorders, or pain disorders.
Child Clinical Psychology
Of the 307 million Americans, there are 74
million children under the age of 18 in the
What Is Contemporary Clinical Psychology? 19
United States (U.S. Census Bureau, 2009).
Many of these children and families are in
need of professional services offered by a psychologist
specially trained to work with this
population. Child clinical psychologists specialize
in working with both children and families.
A recent survey by the APA revealed that
about 2,000 APA members (about 3%) identify
themselves as specializing in child clinical
psychology (APA, 2010a, b). A child and
family focus in clinical training has become
enormously popular within graduate training
programs (Norcross et al., 2008). In addition
to standard training in general clinical psychology,
these psychologists obtain in-depth
training in developmental psychology and
child assessment (e.g., behavioral disorders,
learning disabilities, and motor developmental
delays) and treatment (e.g., family therapy,
parent consultation). They commonly work in
schools, children’s hospitals, community clinics,
and in private practices. Child clinical psychologists
may work with children who have
experienced physical and/or sexual abuse or
who experience attention deficit/hyperactivity
disorder, conduct disorders, autism, enuresis
(bed wetting), learning disabilities, serious
medical illnesses, school phobia, posttraumatic
stress disorder, or a host of other emotional,
behavioral, or medical problems. These psychologists
may provide consultation to teachers,
school counselors, pediatricians, day-care
workers, parents, and others. They may assist
teachers in classroom behavior management
or parents in developing better parenting skills.
Pediatric psychologists are child clinical
psychologists who generally work with children
and families in hospital settings where
the child has a significant medical disorder
(Brown, 2003). These medical problems might
include cancer, epilepsy, diabetes, cystic fibrosis,
and neurological disorders and disabilities.
The pediatric psychologist might offer pain
management strategies to a child while helping
the family cope more effectively with and
locate community resources. He or she may act
as a consultant to various medical units and
departments to help physicians, nurses, and
others deal with the emotional and behavioral
consequences of severe medical illnesses
in children. For example, a pediatric psychologist
might consult with a physician about an
adolescent with diabetes who refuses to monitor
his or her blood sugar level due to concerns
about being different relative to peers. A pediatric
psychologist might consult with nurses
about a child who is hospitalized with cystic
fibrosis and struggling with significant depression
and social isolation.
Clinical Health Psychology
The field of clinical health psychology formally
began around 1980 (Matarazzo, 1980)
and has been defined as:
. . . the aggregate of the specific educational,
scientific, and professional contributions
of the discipline of psychology to
the promotion and maintenance of health,
the prevention and treatment of illness,
the identification of etiologic and diagnostic
correlates of health, illness, and related
dysfunction, and to the analysis and improvement
of the health care system and
health policy formation. (Matarazzo, 1982,
p. 4)
Since its inception during the early 1980s,
health psychology has become one of the
fastest growing areas of clinical psychology
and one of the most popular areas of research
in graduate training programs (Norcross et al.,
2008). This subspecialty serves as an excellent
example of integrative trends in the field
(Johnson, 2003; Taylor, 2009).
It has been estimated that 50% of all deaths
are caused by lifestyle factors such as smoking
cigarettes, drinking too much alcohol, eating
high fat foods, not exercising, and refusing to
wear seatbelts (Centers for Disease Control,
2009). Furthermore, over 15% of the gross
national product is devoted to health care
(Centers for Disease Control, 2009). Health
psychologists work to help healthy people
stay healthy and assist people with various
20 Foundations and Fundamentals
illnesses or risk factors to cope more effectively
with their symptoms. Health psychologists
work toward helping others develop
health-enhancing lifestyles, which can be a
surprisingly difficult task. For example, about
95% of those who lose weight tend to regain
all their lost weight within 5 years (Brownell,
1993; Wadden, Sternberg, Letizia, Stunkard,
& Foster, 1989). Over 50% of those who start
an exercise program drop it within 6 months,
while 75% drop it within nine months (Dishman,
1982). About a half-million people die
in the United States each year due to smoking
tobacco (Centers for Disease Control, 2008).
Health psychologists work with individuals
and groups in order to maximize healthenhancing
behaviors (e.g., exercise, low-fatfood
consumption, smoking cessation) and
minimize health-damaging behaviors (e.g.,
smoking, stress, drinking alcohol). They also
help in the treatment of chronic pain, panic
disorders, and migraine headaches, and other
physical conditions with prominent biopsychosocial
features (S. Taylor, 2009).
Health psychologists are often trained in
clinical psychology, counseling psychology,
social psychology, or child clinical psychology
but specialize in health-related problems
and interventions. Health psychologists typically
work in hospital settings; however, many
also work in academic, business, and outpatient
clinic settings. Health psychologists often
utilize specialized techniques such as biofeedback,
hypnosis, relaxation training, and selfmanagement
strategies in addition to general
psychotherapy in the course of the overall
treatment process.
Clinical Neuropsychology
Neuropsychology focuses on brain–behavior
relationships. These are defined as how brain
functioning impacts behavior and behavioral
problems. Neuropsychologists assess brain and
behavioral functioning and offer strategies for
patients suffering from brain impairment due
to a large range of problems such as dementia,
head injuries, tumors, autism, stroke,
AIDS, Alzheimer’s disease, epilepsy, and other
problems that result in cognitive and neurological
dysfunction. Neuropsychologists are
well trained in assessing a range of cognitive
abilities, including executive or higher order
cognitive functioning (i.e., planning, judgment,
problem solving), sensory and motor
functioning, and memory skills and abstract
reasoning, and use a variety of specialized tests
to assess these brain–behavior relationships.
Many psychologists who specialize in neuropsychology
are trained as clinical or counseling
psychologists or they may be trained
in cognitive science or neuroscience. Most
neuropsychologists work in hospital, rehabilitation,
or clinic settings. Some specialize in
working with children. Many also work in
private or group practice environments.
Forensic Psychology
Forensic psychology is usually defined as
the ‘‘application of psychology to legal issues’’
(Cooke, 1984, p. 29). Forensic psychologists
specialize in using principles of human behavior
in the judicial and legal systems (Otto
& Heilbrun, 2002). They are often trained as
clinical or counseling psychologists with a specialty
in forensic work. Forensic psychologists
may conduct psychological evaluations with
defendants and present their findings as an
expert witness in court. They may also provide
evaluations for child custody arrangements, or
be asked to predict dangerousness or competency
to stand trial. They may be asked to
participate in worker’s compensation claims,
or serve as consultants to attorneys who are
selecting a jury.
Geropsychology
Psychologists who specialize in geropsychology
provide a range of psychological services
to elderly members of society. The elderly are
the largest growing segment of today’s society
and are often in need of professional psychological
services. In fact, the number of elderly
Americans has increased from 3.1 million to
What Is Contemporary Clinical Psychology? 21
35 million during the twentieth century, now
representing 1 in 8 Americans, and will likely
grow to more than 15% of all Americans by
2020 (U.S. Census Bureau, 2008). Geropsychologists
might consult with senior centers,
convalescent or nursing homes, and hospital
medical units that serve elderly patients. These
psychologists might provide psychological or
neuropsychological testing, and brief individual
or family psychotherapy, and consult on
strategies to maximize independence and selfcare.
These psychologists might develop activities
to enhance self-esteem and control and
alleviate depression among elderly patients.
Organizations
As in most professions, clinical psychology
boasts a variety of professional organizations.
These organizations provide an opportunity
for their members to meet and collaborate,
attend yearly conventions and learn about
new advances in the field, and participate in
a number of activities that help psychologists
as well as the public. These organizations are
international, national, regional, and local.
American Psychological Association
Clinical psychologists are usually members of
several professional organizations. Most are
members of the American Psychological
Association (APA). The APA was founded
in 1892 and is the largest organization of psychologists
anywhere in the world. There are
150,000 members of the organization (APA,
2010a, b) representing all specialties within
psychology (e.g., clinical psychology, social
psychology, school psychology, experimental
psychology). Students of psychology and
associates of psychology (e.g., high school psychology
teachers) are also included in the APA.
In recent surveys, approximately half of APA
members identified themselves within clinical
psychology (APA, 2000a, 2009) and about
half have a license to practice in one or more
states (APA, 2000a, 2009, 2010a, b). The APA
was incorporated in 1925 and is located in
Washington, DC. Since the first meeting in
Philadelphia in 1892, the APA holds a yearly
national convention each August in a large
American or Canadian city. The APA is divided
into four directorates focusing on professional
practice, education, public policy, and science.
The APA is also home to 56 topic interest
divisions (e.g., Division 2 is Teaching of Psychology;
Division 12 is Clinical Psychology).
About 6,000 psychologists are members of the
APA’s Division 12
(Clinical Psychology).
The
APA publishes numerous professional journals
(e.g., American Psychologist, Professional Psychology:
Research and Practice, Journal of Consulting
and Clinical Psychology, Journal of Abnormal Psychology)
as well as many books. The APA acts
as a lobbying force in Washington, DC, promoting
legislation that will be favorable to
psychology as a profession and to consumers
of psychological services. The APA also provides
standards for the education, certification,
and ethical conduct of psychologists.
American Psychological Society
In 1988, the American Psychological Society
(APS) was founded. Many of the psychologists
in the APA who regarded themselves
as academically and scientifically focused felt
that the APA no longer adequately represented
their interests. Founding members of the APS
felt that the APA had become too focused
on professional practice and was becoming
neglectful of the science of psychology. A proposal
was considered to either reorganize the
APA to reflect these concerns or start a new
organization dedicated to the science of psychology
only. Clinical psychologists who were
especially interested in the science of psychology
joined APS. Many psychologists belong to
both organizations while others resigned from
the APA to join the APS.
State and County Psychological
Associations
Each state and most counties maintain psychological
associations. Many practicing clinical
psychologists join their state psychological
22 Foundations and Fundamentals
association and may also join their county
psychology
association.
Approximately 40%
of APA members (both clinical and other
psychologists) are also members of their
state psychological association (APA, 2000a,
2010a). These organizations provide networking
opportunities for psychologists as well as
assistance in lobbying state legislatures regarding
issues important to psychologists and
the public’s psychological welfare. Most state
and county psychological associations provide
workshops and conferences for their members
that address various clinical and research
topics. The state psychological associations frequently
work closely with the state boards of
psychology to assist in the policing of unethical
and illegal conduct of psychologists as well
as in developing licensing laws and criteria for
acceptable professional practice.
American Board of Professional
Psychology
The American Board of Professional Psychology
(ABPP) was founded in 1947 as
an
agency that would certify psychologists in
several specialty areas. The ABPP diploma
is
considered an advanced level of accomplishment
beyond a state license to practice as a
psychologist. The ABPP is an independent organization
closely associated with the APA.
The ABPP diploma is offered in a number of
specialty areas: The majority of diplomas are in
clinical psychology. Approximately 1,000 psychologists
hold the ABPP diploma in clinical
psychology (APA, 2010a).
Other Organizations
There are a number of other international, national,
and regional organizations that many
clinical psychologists may join depending on
their specialty interests. For example, many
clinical psychologists are members of the Society
of Behavioral Medicine (SBM), the Society
of Pediatric Psychology, the International Neuropsychology
Society (INS), the Association of
Behavior Analysis (ABA), the International
Society of Clinical Psychology (ISCP), or many
other organizations. Most of these organizations
sponsor a yearly national conference,
publish one or more professional journals,
are involved in lobbying efforts of interest to
their membership, and provide members with
a range of services.
Many other countries also maintain psychological
associations. The Canadian Psychological
Association (CPA), for example,
has a long and distinguished history providing
yearly conventions, maintaining an ethics
code, and accrediting programs throughout
Canada, among other activities. This is also
true for the British Psychological Society
(BPS). Chapter 15 lists the contact information
for many of these organizations.
How Does Clinical Psychology Differ
from Related Fields?
Many people are unaware of the similarities
and differences between clinical psychology
and related fields. For example, a popular
question is, ‘‘What is the difference between
a psychologist and a psychiatrist?’’ It can be
confusing to the public (and even to many
professionals in the field) to understand the
similarities and differences between mental
health disciplines. Since almost all of the mental
health disciplines share certain activities
such as conducting psychotherapy, understanding
differences between these fields can
be very challenging.
Many professionals and members of the
public wonder how clinical psychology differs
from related mental health fields such
as counseling psychology, school psychology,
psychiatry, nursing, social work, and counseling.
A brief overview of these disciplines will
be provided in Table 1.1.
Counseling
Psychologists (PhD)
Of all the different mental health professionals,
counseling psychologists are perhaps the
most similar to clinical psychologists in actual
What Is Contemporary Clinical Psychology? 23
Table 1.1 Mental Health Professionals
Years of
Years of Training Postdegree
Degree Program Prior to Degree* Training License
PhD Clinical Psych 4–5 1–2 Psychologist
PhD Counseling Psych 4–5 1–2 Psychologist
PhD School Psych 4 1–2 School Psychologist
PsyD Clinical Psych 4–5 1–2 Psychologist
MA/MS Clinical Psych 2 1–2 MFT
MA/MS Counseling Psych 2 1–2 MFT
MA/MS School Psych 2 1 School Psychologist
MSW Social Work 2 1–2 Social Worker
MD Medicine 4 3–4 Physician (e.g., Psychiatrist)
∗While graduate school can take 4 to 5 years to complete, this is highly variable. Research projects such as dissertations
as well as practicum experiences often result in a longer period of time to complete training.
practice. While there are generally differences
in philosophy, training emphases, and curriculum
between clinical and counseling graduate
programs, differences between clinical
and counseling psychologists are subtle. Like
clinical psychologists, counseling psychologists
generally major in psychology as undergraduates,
attend a four-year graduate training
program (however, in counseling psychology
rather than clinical psychology), complete
a one-year clinical internship, and complete
postdoctoral training prior to obtaining their
license as a psychologist. The differences between
clinical and counseling psychology were
more dramatic several decades ago in comparison
to current times.
Historically, counseling psychologists
worked in outpatient, college, and vocational
settings with people who did not experience
major psychiatric difficulties. They often
provided educational and occupational counseling
to students and employees. Testing
conducted by counseling psychologists generally
involved career and vocational interests
and skills. Today, counseling psychologists
can be found in hospital, clinic, industry, and
private practice settings. In fact, in most states,
counseling psychologists practice under the
same license as clinical psychologists. Some
authors have argued that distinctions between
clinical and counseling psychology, along with
separate training programs, may no longer
be warranted (e.g., Beutler & Fisher, 1994).
There are about three times more clinical
psychologists than counseling psychologists
in the United States. For example, while
1,185 doctorates were awarded in clinical
psychology in 1999, 367 were awarded
in counseling psychology (APA, 2000a).
According to surveys conducted by the APA
(2000a, 2009b), about 11% of APA members
identify themselves as counseling psychologists
and about 15% of all doctorates awarded
in psychology are awarded in counseling
psychology.
School Psychologists (MA or PhD)
While doctorates in school psychology are
available (e.g., 130 were awarded in 1999;
APA, 2000b), a master’s degree is generally
the degree of choice for school psychologists.
Surveys by the APA (2000a, 2009b) revealed
that about 4% identify themselves as working
in the field of school psychology and about
3% of all doctorates awarded in psychology
24 Foundations and Fundamentals
are awarded in school psychology. School
psychologists typically work in elementary,
secondary, or special education schools providing
cognitive testing, brief counseling, and
consultation to schoolteachers, administrators,
parents, and students. Some school psychologists
also provide tutoring help and some
maintain private practices. School psychologists
often work with children receiving special
education services for problems such as
attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder, learning
disabilities, or mental retardation. These
professionals often provide guidance to both
children and their families concerning educational
and psychological concerns. School
psychologists interested in careers in research,
academics, or administration usually choose
PhD programs while those most interested in
practice with children and families generally
choose MA programs.
Psychiatry (MD)
Psychiatrists are physicians who earn a medical
degree (MD) and complete residency training
in psychiatry. The American Psychiatric
Association reports that there are approximately
40,000 psychiatrists who are members
of the association (American Psychiatric Association,
2010). Approximately 40% of psychiatrists
work in solo private practices (American
Psychiatric Association, 2010). Typically, psychiatrists
receive their bachelor’s degrees in
premedical related fields (e.g., biology, chemistry),
and then complete 4 years of medical
school to obtain an MD degree. Subsequently,
a one-year medical clinical internship is completed,
prior to a residency (usually three
years) in psychiatry. Unlike the internship
completed in clinical psychology, the medical
internship focuses on general medical
(not psychiatric) training. While the residency
training years may include some training activities
similar to that obtained by clinical
psychology interns (e.g., psychotherapy), most
programs focus on medication management
and other pharmaceutical approaches to psychiatric
disorders. The residency is usually
completed in a hospital or medical center
environment. However, residency training can
also occur in outpatient settings such as community
mental health clinics. These physicians
obtain their medical license following medical
school and often take their boards to become
board certified in a specialty area (e.g., child
psychiatry) when they complete their residency
program.
Because psychiatrists are physicians, they
use their medical training to diagnose and
treat a wide spectrum of mental illnesses.
Psychiatrists, as MDs, can prescribe medication,
treat physical illnesses, and may utilize
other biological interventions (e.g., electroconvulsive
therapy). Although there are exceptions,
psychiatric training generally focuses
on clinical diagnoses and treatment of major
psychopathology (i.e., affective or mood disorders,
such as bipolar disorder, and psychotic
disorders, such as schizophrenia). Training in
general human behavior and research is usually
minimal.
Relative to other mental health disciplines,
there are a variety of pros and cons to being
a psychiatrist. Advantages include several
factors. First, as physicians, psychiatrists have
extensive training in the biological basis of behavior
and behavioral problems. They are able
to use this expertise to understand and treat
a wide range of medical and psychiatric problems.
Psychiatrists have superior knowledge of
medical aspects of certain disorders, and have
been trained to take a leadership role vis- `avis
these patients. Thus, they can prescribe
medication and other biological treatments for
their patients, whereas most other clinicians
must refer patients to an MD if medication
or other biological interventions are indicated.
However, psychologists are able to prescribe
medication in several states (e.g., New Mexico,
Louisiana; Beutler, 2002). Second, psychiatrists
have a much higher earning potential
than any other mental health professional.
Starting salaries typically are over $100,000,
with average salaries about $150,000 depending
on the work setting. In comparison, the
average starting salary for practicing psychologists
is about two-thirds of psychiatrists at
What Is Contemporary Clinical Psychology? 25
about $70,000 (American Psychological Association,
2008). Third, as physicians, psychiatrists
generally hold greater status and positions
of greater authority, especially in hospital
or other medical settings. Higher salaries and
prestige are due to the costs and competitiveness
of medical education as well as society’s
admiration of physicians in general.
There are several important disadvantages
to becoming a psychiatrist. First, the costs
of medical training are extremely high compared
with the training costs of other mental
health professionals. Second, psychiatrists
tend to have much less training in general
human behavior and psychotherapy than
most other mental health professionals. For
example, while most psychologists spend four
undergraduate, five graduate, and one to two
postdoctoral years focusing specifically on psychology
and psychotherapy, psychiatrists only
spend the three residency years focused on
psychiatry, which tends to primarily train
these professionals on using medications for
behavioral and emotional problems. Thus,
many first-year psychiatry residents are far
‘‘greener,’’ for example, than most advanced
psychology graduate students or predoctoral
psychology interns. Third, psychiatrists also
are not trained in psychological testing and
assessment, and must defer to clinical psychologists
in order to acquire this often-critical
information. Fourth, psychiatrists are rarely
trained as extensively as clinical psychologists
in rigorous research methodology. Finally,
fewer and fewer medical students choose psychiatry
as a specialty, in fact dropping by 40%
since the 1980s alone (Tamaskar & McGinnis,
2002). Psychiatric salaries, although high
in comparison to non-MD mental health professionals,
are very low compared with other
physicians. In recent decades, traditional psychodynamic
and interpersonal relational approaches
to psychiatry have given way to more
biological approaches, partially due to new discoveries
in the neurosciences, psychopharmacology,
genetics, and other medical areas (e.g.,
Fleck, 1995; Glasser, 2003; Michels, 1995), as
well as the demand by managed care insurance
companies and patients for quicker acting
treatment approaches (e.g., Cummings, 1995).
Finally, the lobbying efforts of the pharmaceutical
industry have also influenced the reliance
on medications to treat all sorts of behavioral
and emotional concerns (Glasser, 2003).
Social Work (MSW)
There are approximately 150,000 members of
the National Association of Social Workers
(NASW, 2010). Social workers have typically
obtained a bachelor’s degree in a social science
such as psychology or sociology and subsequently
entered a two-year graduate program
to attain their master’s degree in social work
(MSW). Next, they must complete up to two
years of supervised clinical experience (depending
on the state) to become a Licensed
Clinical Social Worker (LCSW). Similar to
the clinical psychology internship, many social
workers receive training in psychotherapy
and psychiatric diagnoses during their year or
years of supervised clinical experience. Unlike
in psychology, they generally do not obtain
extensive training in conducting research or
using psychological testing instruments. However,
those who earn a doctorate degree in
social work (DSW) often are interested in
research and academic careers.
Historically, social workers focused on
patient case management (i.e., helping the
patient get the most out of his or her inpatient
or outpatient treatment and helping patients
transition to work or further treatment
following discharge), patient advocacy, and
a liaison to optimal social service agencies
and benefits. Whereas psychiatrists have
historically focused on biological theories and
interventions and psychologists have focused
on psychological theories and intervention,
social workers have focused on social theories
and interventions. Today, social workers can
conduct psychotherapy with individuals, families,
or groups, or undertake administrative
roles within agencies, hospitals, or social service
settings. Providing direct clinical services
to clients and patients is the most frequently
reported activity of social workers (National
26 Foundations and Fundamentals
Association of Social Workers, 2010). Social
workers can be employed in numerous
settings including schools, hospitals, clinics,
and
private practice.
Employment in social
service agencies and both inpatient and outpatient
health facilities are the most common
settings for social workers while about 12%
are engaged in private practice (National
Association of Social Workers, 2010). Social
workers also may act as patient case managers
and advocates, securing necessary follow-up
care and social services following hospital
discharge, for example.
Advantages to becoming a social worker
include first a shorter (and, thus, less expensive)
length of graduate training (i.e., two
years as opposed to the minimum five years
necessary for a PhD degree in clinical psychology).
Second, training in social work tends to
highlight social factors such as poverty, crime,
racism, and oppression that influence individual,
group, and organizational behavior as
well as emphasizing advocacy for the rights of
others. Third, no dissertation or large research
study master’s thesis is required for those who
are not interested in conducting these types
of large-scale research projects. Disadvantages
include less training and emphasis on the
biological influences on behavior and less attention
on research. Additional disadvantages
include lower earning ability than psychologists
and psychiatrists. Average salaries tend
to be about $50,000 depending on the position
and location. Social workers, like any
clinician, can specialize and become expert in
any nonprescribing or nonpsychological assessment
enterprise.
Psychiatric Nursing (RN)
There are over 11,000 psychiatric nurses
who have specialty training in psychiatric
illnesses and treatment (American Psychiatric
Nurses Association, 2009). They usually
obtain both an undergraduate and master’s
degree in nursing. They are licensed as
registered nurses (RN) following the completion
of their undergraduate degree. During
their training, they, like other mental health
professionals, learn about psychiatric diagnosis
and treatment. However, they also learn
about psychopharmacology and are often
involved in the dispensing of psychotropic
medications to patients. Psychiatric nurses
provide psychotherapy to individuals, families,
and groups as well as assisting in medical
management of psychotropic medications.
Many psychiatric nurses are employed in
hospitals and clinics; however, many maintain
private practices as well.
Marriage and Family
Therapists (MFT)
The mental health discipline of marriage and
family therapists is very popular in California
and several other states. There are approximately
25,000 MFTs in California alone
and about 50,000 nationally. The Association
of Marriage and Family Therapists has about
25,000 members nationally. MFTs typically
complete a bachelor’s degree in any field (typically
a social science discipline such as psychology,
sociology, or education), and later pursue
a master’s degree in a terminal master’s counseling
or psychology program. Following up to
two years of supervised experience, MFTs can
be licensed to practice independently in most
but not all states. Despite the title, MFTs are
not necessarily experts solely in marriage and
family counseling. Often, they treat adults in
individual therapy, as well. Advantages to becoming
an MFT include the ease of acceptance
into programs and the one to two years necessary
to obtain amaster’s degree. Disadvantages
include the general mixed quality and training
of professionals in this field.
Many states offer licensure as a Licensed
Professional Counselor (LPC) designed for
master’s-level practitioners. The training and
experience for this profession tends to be
similar to those outlined for MFTs.
Other Counselors
Many hospitals and clinics employ a variety
of counselors such as occupational therapists,
activity therapists, alcohol counselors, art
What Is Contemporary Clinical Psychology? 27
therapists, psychiatric technicians, and others.
These professionals provide a wide variety
of services to patients including individual,
family, and group counseling, and therapeutic
activities such as art, dance, and music
groups. Some of these professionals obtain
a license or certification to practice (e.g.,
occupational therapists) while others do not
(e.g., psychiatric technicians). Legislation
in many states, such as Missouri, has been
proposed or passed allowing occupational
therapists, for example, to be licensed as
‘‘mental health professionals.’’
Other Psychologists
There are many different types of psychologists
besides the clinical, counseling, and school
psychologists previously described. Cognitive,
developmental, experimental, social, personality,
industrial-organizational, physiological,
and other types of psychologists are represented
in
the field.
They complete a doctoral
degree in psychology with specialization in
one or more of the areas already listed. Unlike
clinical psychologists, they are not mandated
to complete an internship or postdoctoral fellowship.
These psychologists work in educational
settings such as colleges and universities
as well as in business, government, and the
military. They conduct research, consult with
individuals and groups, and develop policies.
They have different areas of expertise and skill
but generally do not assess or treat patients
experiencing emotional, behavioral, interpersonal,
or other clinical problems. They are not
considered mental health professionals and
may not even be interested in human behavior.
For example, an experimental psychologist
might conduct research on the memory functioning
of rats or the visual functioning of
cats. A social psychologist might be interested
in the social functioning of groups of primates.
A physiological psychologist might be interested
in how organisms such as birds learn
new behaviors. These psychologists might be
interested in human behavior but not in abnormal
or clinical problems. For example, an
industrial-organizational psychologist might
help an executive interact with employees
to improve performance or morale. A cognitive
psychologist might study how medications
impact attentional processes and sleeping behavior.
A developmental psychologist might
be interested in how children who are in
full-time day care that starts during the first
weeks of life bond with their mothers. With
the exception of industrial-organizational psychologists,
these psychologists do not obtain
a license to practice psychology and therefore
do not treat clinical problems.
The Big Picture
The goals, activities, and contributions of clinical
psychologists are very appealing to many
who are fascinated by human behavior and relationships.
Contemporary clinical psychology
can be defined as the assessment, treatment,
and study of human behavior in the context
of biological, psychological, and social factors.
Thus, integration as well as awareness of such
individual differences such as culture, ethnicity,
and gender is part and parcel of the state
of this current art and science. The enormous
popularity of psychology as an undergraduate
major, of clinical psychology as a career path,
and of popular psychology books, shows, web
sites, and blogs are a testament to the inherent
interest of clinical psychology. Most psychologists
report a high degree of satisfaction with
their career choice, and enjoy the tremendous
flexibility and diversity of potential employment
settings, the opportunity to work with
people from diverse backgrounds, and participation
in the rapid scientific advances impacting
the field. However, changes in health-care
delivery and reimbursement, the large number
of degrees being awarded in clinical psychology
and other mental health disciplines, and
the modest salaries of most psychologists must
be viewed realistically along with the many
advantages of clinical psychology as a career.
The goals and activities of clinical psychology
are noble: to use the principles of psychology
and our understanding of human behavior
28 Foundations and Fundamentals
to promote health, happiness, and enhanced
quality of life.
Key Points
1. Clinical psychology focuses on the diagnosis,
treatment, and study of psychological
and behavioral problems and disorders.
Clinical psychology attempts to use the
principles of psychology to better understand,
predict, and alleviate ‘‘intellectual,
emotional, biological, psychological, social,
and behavioral aspects of human functioning’’
(APA, 2009).
2. The road to becoming a clinical psychologist
is a long one divided by a number of distinct
stages and phases, which include college,
graduate school, clinical internship, postdoctoral
fellowship, licensure, and finally
employment. However, academic positions
are usually available following receipt of a
doctorate degree and prior to licensure.
3. One of the great advantages of being a
clinical psychologist is that there are a
wide variety of activities and employment
settings in which to work. Becoming a
clinical psychologist allows one to teach
at the university level, conduct research,
provide consultation to a wide variety
of professionals and organizations, and
conduct psychotherapy and psychological
testing with a wide range of populations.
4. Clinical psychologists work in many different
employment settings including hospitals,
medical schools, outpatient clinics,
colleges and universities, business and industry
settings, and private or group practices.
The majority of clinical psychologists
work in some type of part-time or full-time
private practice. Following private practice,
educational settings, such as academic careers
in colleges and universities, are the
second most common employment setting
for clinical psychologists.
5. Many clinical psychologists ultimately specialize
in one or more areas of research
or practice. While there are many types of
clinical psychology subspecialties, the most
common include child clinical psychology,
health psychology, neuropsychology, and
forensic psychology.
6. Clinical psychologists are organized into a
wide variety of professional organizations.
Most psychologists are members of the
APA. The APA is also divided into 56 topic
interest divisions. About 6,000 psychologists
are members of the APA Division 12
(Clinical Psychology).
7. In 1988, the American Psychological Society
(APS) was founded by many of the
academic or science-minded psychologists
in the APA who felt that the APA no
longer adequately represented their interests.
Founding members of the APS felt that
the APA had become too focused on professional
practice and was becoming less and
less attuned to the science of psychology.
8. Each state and most counties maintain
psychological associations. Most clinical
psychologists join their state psychological
association and may also join their county
psychology association.
9. The American Board of Professional Psychology
(ABPP) was founded in 1947 as an
agency that would certify psychologists in
several specialty areas. The ABPP diploma
is considered an advanced level of recognition
and is certification beyond a state
license to practice as a psychologist.
10. Clinical psychology maintains both similarities
and differences with other mental
health–related fields such as counseling
psychology, school psychology, psychiatry,
social work, nursing, and marriage, family,
and child counseling.
11. Changes in health-care delivery and reimbursement,
the large number of degrees
being awarded in clinical psychology and
other mental health disciplines, and the
moderate salaries of most psychologists can
be viewed as some disadvantages of clinical
psychology as a career option.
12. The field of clinical psychology is dedicated
to humanitarian concerns. Clinical
psychology seeks to use the principles of
human behavior to minimize or eliminate
human suffering and enhance and improve
Chapter 2
Today, clinical psychology is a complex
and diverse field encompassing numerous
subspecialties and a continuum of scientific
and practitioner-focused enterprises. In
seeking to alleviate human suffering in emotional,
behavioral, and physical realms, clinical
psychology has borrowed from philosophical,
medical, and scientific advances throughout
the centuries. Chapters 2 and 3 highlight the
seminal historical influences and fundamental
contributors to the ever-evolving science and
practice of today’s clinical psychology. First,
the evolution of Western medicine from a
nonscientific endeavor to today’s high-tech
standard of practice is traced. Central to this
evolution has been the titanic human struggle
to understand abnormal behavior in the context
of the mind and the body. As you will see,
an integration between the forces of mind and
body has been long in coming, developing in
fits and starts throughout the ages into today’s
biopsychosocial appreciation for the dynamic
forces that join to create behavior. And just as
this mind–body integration has developed, the
practice and training of clinical psychologists
have mirrored landmark scientific changes in
this evolving field of study.
This chapter highlights the early influences
and foundations that led to the development
of clinical psychology as an independent science
and profession. It traces the history and
development of issues relevant to contemporary
clinical psychology, from ancient times
until World War I. Ideas, events, institutions,
and people associated with this history are
highlighted. Also, Table 2.1 provides an outline
of significant events in the field prior to
World War II. The influence of biological, psychological,
and social factors and the roots of
31
32 Foundations and Fundamentals
Table 2.1 Significant Events in Clinical Psychology Prior to World War II
Before Psychology Was Founded as a Field
2500–500 B.C. Supernatural, magic, herbs, and reason was the approach to mental and physical illness.
470–322 B.C. Greeks use holistic approach to illness, which is attentive to biological, psychological, and
social influences.
130–200 A.D. Galen develops foundation of Western medicine based on the influence of the Greeks,
which lasts 1,000 years.
500–1450 Middle Ages believe supernatural forces
influence health and illness.
1225–1274 Saint Thomas Aquinas uses scientific thinking to help explain health and illness.
1490–1541 Paracelsus suggests that the movements of the stars, moon, sun, and planets influence
behavior.
1500–1700 Renaissance witnesses numerous scientific discoveries suggesting that biological factors
influence health and illness.
1596–1650 Ren´e Descartes develops mind/body dualism.
1745–1826 Pinel, in France, develops humane moral therapy to treat mentally ill.
1802–1887 Dorothea Dix advocates for humane treatment of mentally ill in America.
1848 New Jersey becomes first state to build a hospital for mentally ill patients.
After Psychology Was Founded as a Field and until World War II
1879 Wilhelm Wundt develops first laboratory in psychology.
1879 William James develops first American psychology laboratory at Harvard.
1883 G. Stanley Hall develops second psychology laboratory at Johns Hopkins.
1888 James McKean Cattell develops third American psychology laboratory.
1890 James publishes Principles of Psychology.
1890 Cattell defines mental test.
1892 American Psychological Association founded.
1896 Lightner Witmer establishes first psychology
clinic at the University of Pennsylvania
.
1900 Freud publishes The Interpretation of Dreams.
1904 Alfred Binet begins developing an intelligence test.
1905 Binet and Theodore Simon offer Binet-Simon scale of intelligence.
1905 Carl Jung creates a word association test.
1907 Psychological Clinic, first clinical journal, is published.
1908 Clifford Beers begins mental hygiene movement.
1909 Clinical psychology section formed at APA.
1909 Freud’s only visit to America at Clark University.
1909 William Healy develops child guidance clinic in Chicago.
1916 Lewis Terman develops Stanford-Binet
Intelligence Test
.
1917 Clinicians of APA leave to form American Association of Clinical Psychologists (AACP).
1917 Robert Yerkes and committee develop Army Alpha test.
(continued)
Foundations and Early History of Clinical Psychology 33
Table 2.1 Continued
After Psychology Was Founded as a Field and until World War II
1919 AACP rejoins APA.
1921 Cattell develops Psychological Corporation.
1921 Hermann Rorschach presents his inkblot test.
1924 Mary Cover Jones uses learning principles to treat children’s fears.
1935 APA Committee on Standards and Training define clinical psychology.
1936 Louttit publishes first clinical psychology textbook.
1937 Clinicians leave APA again to form American Association of Applied Psychology (AAAP).
1937 Journal of Consulting Psychology begins.
1939 The Wechsler-Bellevue Intelligence Scale is published.
1945 AAAP rejoins APA.
1945 Connecticut passes first certification law for psychology.
integration of perspectives are noted. It is unlikely
that the people associated with these
ideas and events could have predicted how
they might influence further generations to
derive the perspectives of today. Chapter 3 examines
the more recent developments in the
field, from World War II until the present.
A full understanding of contemporary clinical
psychology hinges on a sound appreciation
and understanding of its foundation and
history.
Early Conceptions of Mental Illness:
Mind and Body Paradigms
The Greeks
Several Greek thinkers were pivotal in the
early development of integrative approaches
to illness, and, thus, were precursors to a
biopsychosocial perspective. Although the ancient
Greeks felt that the gods ultimately
controlled both health and illness, they looked
beyond supernatural influences and explored
biological, psychological, and social influences
on illness (Maher & Maher, 1985a). The
Greeks believed that the mind and body were
closely interconnected. Somewhat similar to
today’s health resorts, ailing Greeks often
would spend a few days at a temple where they
would engage in treatments that might include
prayer, special foods, bathing, dream analysis,
and animal sacrifice. The doctor-priest who
conducted these treatments believed that healing
could occur through activation of a life
force stimulated by the treatment protocols
(Mora, 1985).
The famous Greek physician,
Hippocrates
(460–377 B.C.), who led the writing of the Hippocratic
Corpus, felt that disease was primarily
the result of an imbalance in four bodily fluids
or humors, rather than of spiritual factors (Maher
& Maher, 1985a). These fluids were black
bile, yellow bile, phlegm, and blood. Furthermore,
Hippocrates felt that the relationship
between these bodily fluids also determined
temperament and personality. For example,
too much yellow bile resulted in a choleric
(angry, irritable) temperament, whereas too
much black bile resulted in a melancholic (sadness,
hopelessness) personality. Hippocrates
felt that these imbalances might originate in
the patient’s environment. For example, it was
believed that water quality, altitude, wind, and
time of year were important considerations in
the etiology of illness. Hippocrates encouraged
fellow doctors to be gentle and patient
with their patients because various stressors
were viewed as capable of preventing healing.
34 Foundations and Fundamentals
Hippocrates maintained a holistic approach to
health and illness reflected in his statement:
‘‘In order to cure the human body, it is necessary
to have a knowledge of the whole of
things.’’ He felt that head trauma and heredity
could also account for abnormal behavior and
illness. He was sensitive to interpersonal, psychological,
and stress factors that contribute to
problem behavior. The thinking and writing of
Hippocrates helped to move from a spiritualistic
toward a more naturalistic view or model of
health and illness. Hippocrates suggested that
biological, psychological, and social factors all
contribute to both physical and emotional illness.
This early biopsychosocial perspective
was further championed by Plato, Aristotle,
and Galen until its temporary demise in the
Middle Ages.
Plato (427–347 B.C.) saw the spirit or soul as
being in charge of the body and that problems
residing in the soul could result in physical
illness (Mora, 1985). Plato quoted Socrates
(470–399 B.C.) as stating: ‘‘As it is not proper
to cure the eyes without the head, nor the
head without the body, so neither is it proper
to cure the body without the soul.’’ Plato felt
that mental illness resulted from sickness in
the logistikon or the part of the soul that operates
in the head, controlling reason. He felt
that personality, a lack of harmony, and ignorance
about the self were responsible for
mental illness symptoms. Aristotle (384–322
B.C.) maintained a scientific emphasis and felt
that certain distinct emotional states including
joy, anger, fear, and courage impacted the
functioning of the human body. Aristotle felt
that treatment for mental problems should include
talking and the use of logic to influence
the soul and psyche (Maher & Maher, 1985a).
The use of logic and reason to influence emotional
and behavioral problems is one of the
major principles behind today’s cognitive therapy.
These Greek philosophers and physicians
viewed health, illness, personality, and behavior
as being intimately interconnected.
Galen (A.D. 130–200) was a Greek physician
who integrated the work and perspectives
outlined by Hippocrates, Plato, Aristotle, and
others and developed a holistic program of
medical practice that became the foundation
of medicine in Europe for 1,000 years (Maher
& Maher, 1985a; Mora, 1985). Like his Greek
colleagues, Galen also used the humoral
theory of balance between the four bodily
fluids discussed previously as a foundation
for treatments. Induced vomiting to treat
depression as well as induced bleeding or
bloodletting to treat a variety of ailments
were common treatments used for centuries
(Burton, 1621/1977; Kemp, 1990). Galen also
felt that the brain was the rational soul and the
center of sensation and reason. Additionally,
he thought that humans experienced one of
two irrational subsouls, one for males and one
for females. The male subsoul was thought to
be located in the heart, whereas the female
subsoul was thought to be located in the liver.
Unlike Plato, Galen felt that the soul was the
slave and not the master of the body, and
that wishes of the soul in the body resulted in
health and illness.
Together, the Greeks developed a remarkably
holistic perspective in which we can see
many of the roots of our current beliefs on
mind and body interactions in mental and
physical illness. However, the ensuing Middle
Ages would temporarily derail from this line
of reasoning, instead embracing largely supernatural
views of illness.
The Middle Ages
During the Middle Ages (A.D. 500–1450), earlier
notions regarding the relationship among
health, illness, mind, and body
reemerged
(Kemp, 1990). Perhaps as a response to the
highly turbulent, frightening, and stressful
times during the Black Plague, numerous
wars, and the split within the Roman Catholic
Church resulting in two Catholic centers and
popes, the focus on supernatural influences to
explain events became commonplace. Disease
and ‘‘insanity,’’ many believed, were caused
by spiritual matters such as the influence of
demons, witches, and sin. Therefore, healing
and treatment became, once more, a spiritual
rather than a medical issue using integrative
biopsychosocial strategies. Those who were ill
Foundations and Early History of Clinical Psychology 35
would consult with priests or other clergy, and
atonement for sins would likely be prescribed
as the road to recovery. People who were ‘‘insane’’
would often be treated by exorcism.
Some were chained to church walls in order
to benefit from prayers; some were tortured
and killed. In 1484, Pope Innocent VIII issued
a papal statement approving of the persecution
of ‘‘witches.’’ Although the mentally ill
were certainly not the only people targeted, it
has been estimated that 150,000 people were
executed in the name of religion during this
time period (Kemp, 1990).
Although most modern people would disagree
with the supernatural emphasis and
inhumane treatments during the Middle Ages,
some of the same type of thinking and blaming
of the victim is found today. For example,
many of the problems of the Germans during
the 1930s and early 1940s were blamed on
the Jews. During the 1980s, many (including
several U.S. senators) suggested that AIDS was
a plague from God for ‘‘immoral’’ homosexual
behavior. Today, many blame illegal immigration
as a critical factor in many societal ills,
including problems such as economic woes,
violence, and youth crime.
Not everyone during the Middle Ages believed
that good and evil, spirits and demons,
sorcery and witchcraft contributed to mental
illness (Kemp, 1990; Maher & Maher,
1985a). Some, such as Saint Thomas Aquinas
(1225–1274), felt that there was both theological
truth and scientific truth. For example,
Aquinas reasoned that the soul was unable
to become ‘‘sick’’ and, therefore, mental illness
must have a physical cause or be due to
problems in reason or passion (Aglioni, 1982).
The late fourteenth-century French bishop
Nicholas Oresme felt that abnormal behavior
and mental illness were due to diseases such
as melancholy (today’s depression). Furthermore,
the insane were sometimes humanely
and compassionately cared for by people living
in rural villages.
Another model to explain abnormal behavior,
which became especially popular during
the sixteenth century, was the influence of
the moon, stars, and alignment of the planets.
A Swiss physician, Paracelsus (1490–1541),
popularized the notion that various movements
of the stars, moon, and planets influenced
mood and behavior. Paracelsus also
focused on the biological foundations of mental
illness and developed humane treatments.
Juan Luis Vives (1492–1540) and Johann
Weyer (1515–1588) helped to shift theories
of mental illness from a focus on the soul
to an emphasis on behavior and promoted
humane treatments of the mentally ill. During
the Middle Ages, the biological, psychological,
social, astrological, and supernatural
influences on behavior were believed to be
responsible for mental illness and abnormal
behavior. Different institutions, groups, and
individuals maintained different opinions concerning
which of these factors could explain
behavior the best. Sadly, some of these beliefs
resulted in poor or no treatment as well as
inhumane behavior toward others.
The Renaissance
During the Renaissance, renewed interest in
the physical and medical worlds emerged,
overshadowing supernatural and religious
viewpoints. Interest in the mind and soul were
considered unscientific and thus relegated to
the philosophers and clergy. New discoveries
in chemistry, physics, biology, and mathematics
unfolded rapidly and were met with great
enthusiasm (Mora, 1985). Giovanni Battista
Morgagni (1682–1771), for example, discovered
through autopsy that a diseased organ
in the body could cause illness and death.
Andreas Vesalius (1514–1564), a Dutch physician,
published an anatomy textbook in 1543
delineating dissection of the human body.
The emphasis on scientific observation and
experimentation rather than reason, mythology,
religious beliefs, and dogma provided a
model for future research and teaching. When
William Harvey, an English physician, used
the scientific method in 1628 to determine
that blood circulated through the body because
of the function of the heart, the Greek
36 Foundations and Fundamentals
notion of imbalance of bodily fluids vanished
from medical thinking.
New medical discoveries during the Renaissance
resulted in biomedical reductionism
in
that disease, including mental illness, could be
understood by scientific observation and experimentation
rather than beliefs about mind
and soul. The biological side of the integrative
biopsychosocial perspective was emphasized.
Ren´e Descartes (1596–1650), a French
philosopher, argued that the mind and body
were separate. This dualism of mind and body
became the basis for Western medicine until
recently. The mind and body were viewed historically
as split, in that diseases of the body
were studied by the medical sciences while
problems with the mind or emotional life
were delegated to the philosophers and clergy.
However, mental illness was often considered
a disease of the brain, and thus the insane
were treated using the medical orientation of
the time.
Treatment of mental illness, however,
lagged behind these medical developments.
During this period, physicians treated people
who were considered deviant or abnormal
by confining them to hospitals and asylums.
Little treatment, other than custodial care,
was provided to these patients and thus these
asylums were renowned for their prison-like
environments. The term bedlam (a variant
of Bethlehem), connoting chaos and hellish
circumstances, originated when St. Mary’s
of Bethlehem was opened in London during
1547. Active treatments, besides custodial
care, included restrictive cribs, hunger cures,
bloodletting, cold-water dunking or hydrotherapy,
and other painful treatments (Kemp,
1990; Mora, 1985).
The Nineteenth Century
In the nineteenth century, numerous advances
in understanding mental and physical
illness allowed for a more sophisticated understanding
of the relationship between body
and mind in both health and illness. A breakthrough
of the nineteenth century involved
the discovery by Rudolf Virchow (1821–1902),
Louis Pasteur (1822–1895), and others that
disease and illness could be attributed to dysfunction
at the cellular level (Maher & Maher,
1985a). For example, the discovery that
syphilis was caused by microorganisms entering
the brain following sexual activity helped
to support the biological model of mental illness.
The laboratory thus took center stage as
the arena for the investigation of disease. The
nineteenth-century discovery that germs or microorganisms
can cause disease, along with
the twentieth-century advances in medical,
genetic, and technological discoveries, have
continued to support the ‘‘Cartesian dualism’’
perspective of Descartes in the seventeenth
century.
However, dualism was tempered in the
last part of the eighteenth century and during
the nineteenth century due to the work and
influence of a variety of physicians who believed
that the mind and body were connected,
not separate. Benjamin Rush (1745–1813) authored
the first American text in psychiatry,
positing that the mind could cause a variety
of
diseases.
Franz Mesmer (1733–1815), an
Austrian physician, and others noticed that
many people experiencing paralysis, deafness,
and blindness had no biomedical pathology,
leaving psychological causes suspect. Claude
Bernard (1813–1878) was a prominent physician
who argued for recognition of the role
of psychological factors in physical illness.
Jean Martin Charcot (1825–1893), a French
physician, used hypnosis to treat a wide variety
of conversion disorders (i.e., physical
symptoms such as paralysis, blindness, deafness
without apparent physical cause). Thus,
many nineteenth-century physicians laid the
groundwork for today’s current theories and
practices integrating the influences of physical,
psychological, and social factors on health
and well-being.
These advances lead to greater sensitivity
and sophistication regarding the treatment of
individuals with mental illness. A psychosocial
approach to mental illness called moral
therapy emerged during this time. Moral
therapy sought to treat patients as humanely
Foundations and Early History of Clinical Psychology 37
as possible and encouraged the nurturance
of interpersonal relationships. Its founder,
French physician Philippe Pinel (1745–1826),
did much to improve the living conditions and
treatment approaches used by mental hospitals
during the nineteenth century. He became
director of several mental hospitals in France
and altered the treatment facilities to maximize
patient welfare and humane forms of
treatment. Using the same principles in the
United States, Eli Todd (1769–1833) developed
a retreat-like program for the treatment
of the mentally ill in Hartford, Connecticut.
This program is still in operation today and is
called the Institute of Living. William Tuke
(1732–1822) also developed more humane
treatment approaches in English mental hospitals.
Dorothea Dix (1802–1887), a Massachusetts
school teacher, worked heroically
for 40 years to improve treatment conditions
for the mentally ill in the United States. During
the Civil War, she acted as the head nurse
for the Union Military. Due to her efforts, New
Jersey became the first state to build a hospital
for the mentally ill in 1848. Many states
quickly followed suit.
Significant improvements in the diagnosis
of mental illness emerged during this time as
well. Efforts to apply scientific methodology to
better classify and diagnose abnormal behavior
were implemented. For example, influential
German physician Emil Kraeplin (1856–1926)
defined the term dementia praecox to describe
the constellation of behaviors we generally
now consider schizophrenia [named by Eugen
Bleuler (1857–1930)]. Kraeplin also asserted
that mental disorders were brain disorders,
and mental illness could be classified as
rising from either exogenous or endogenous
influences. The thinking and work of Kraeplin,
Bleuler, and others during this period not only
helped to clarify mental disorders as medical
problems but also assisted in developing a
classification system for understanding and
categorizing many mental disorders.
Franz Alexander (1891–1964) also studied
the association between psychological factors
and both physical and mental illnesses (Mora,
1985). He proposed that as a specific stressor
occurred, a genetically predetermined organ
system of the body responded. By repressing
conflict, for example, Alexander felt that
psychic energy could be channeled into the
sympathetic division of the autonomic nervous
system, thus overstimulating this system
and producing disease. Therefore, while one
person might repress conflict and eventually
develop an ulcer (due to gastric acid secretion),
another person might develop colitis,
headache, or asthma. Alexander argued that
specific personality styles, as opposed to unconscious
conflicts, resulted in specific disease.
For example, he felt that dependence would
typically result in the development of ulcers
while repressed rage would result in hypertension.
Research continues to reveal biological,
psychological, and social influences in the development
of ulcers, hypertension, and other
diseases.
A confluence of factors thus led to the birth
of psychology as an independent discipline and
science separate from, but related to, philosophy,
medicine, and theology. We can see
the roots of today’s mind–body integrative
and biopsychosocial perspective. The evolution
of the Western view of medicine and of
abnormal behavior; the use of the scientific
method to make new discoveries in biology,
chemistry, physics, and math; the emergence
of psychoanalytic thinking; and the interest
in individual differences in behavior together
combined to set the stage for the subsequent
emergence of the science and practice of psychology.
The Birth of Psychology
In 1860, Theodor Fechner (1801–1887) published
The Elements of Psychophysics while Wilhelm
Wundt (1832–1920) published the Principles
of Physiological Psychology in 1874. These
publications were the first to indicate clearly
that techniques of physiology and physics
could be used to answer psychological questions.
The first laboratory of psychology was
subsequently developed by Wundt at the University
of Leipzig, Germany, in 1879, and
38 Foundations and Fundamentals
psychology was born. Wundt was especially
interested in individual and group differences
in sensation and perception, studying human
reaction times in various laboratory experiments.
He was also interested in using both
the scientific method and introspection to better
understand the structure and components
of the mind. William James also established
a psychology laboratory at Harvard University
at about the same time that Wundt was developing
his laboratory. Whereas Yale University
offered the first formal PhD in ‘‘Philosophy
and Psychology’’ in 1861, Harvard University
offered the first American PhD in psychology
in 1878. G. Stanley Hall established the
second American psychology laboratory at
Johns Hopkins University in 1883 while James
McKeen Cattell established the third American
laboratory in 1888. Hall also established
the first independent psychology department
at Clark University in 1887.
In 1890, James published Principles of Psychology,
which became the first classic psychology
text. In 1891, James Baldwin established
the first psychology laboratory in Canada at
the University of Toronto. In 1892, the American
Psychological Association (APA) was
founded, and G. Stanley Hall was elected its
first president. During the beginning months
and years of this new field, American psychology
nurtured its roots in experimental
psychology and was less interested in clinical
or applied psychology. The early members of
the APA tended to be academics in universities
conducting empirical research.
In addition to sensation, perception, and
understanding the dimensions of the mind
through experimentation, the early psychologists
were interested in the development and
use of mental tests. Although not a psychologist,
Francis Galton, a relative of Charles
Darwin, was interested in statistical analysis
of differences among people in reaction time,
sensory experiences, and motor behavior. He
developed a laboratory in England to study
these issues in 1882. In the United States,
James McKeen Cattell (1860–1944) also studied
reaction time and other differences in
human behavior. Cattell coined the term mental
test in 1890 to refer to measures that he
developed in the hopes of tapping intellectual
abilities. At the University of Freiburg,
Germany, Hugo Mu¨ nsterberg also developed
a series of tests to investigate the mental abilities
of children in 1891. This emerging interest
in testing later grew into one of the fundamental
cornerstones and contributions of the
discipline of clinical psychology.
Thus, psychology was founded, and its
early years were launched by academic psychologists
interested in empirically measuring
various aspects of human behavior to better
understand the components of the mind.
They had very little interest in applying
their findings to assist people with emotional,
behavioral, or intellectual problems or disorders.
The desire to apply these newly developed
methods and principles of psychology
to people in need was soon to result in the
birth of clinical psychology (Maher & Maher,
1985b).
The Founding of Clinical Psychology
While psychology was born as a distinct discipline
with the founding of the APA in 1892,
the birth of clinical psychology as a specialty
area occurred four years later in 1896 with
the opening of the first psychological clinic
at the University of Pennsylvania by Lightner
Witmer (1867–1956). Witmer completed
his undergraduate studies at the University of
Pennsylvania in 1888 and earned his PhD in
psychology at the University of Leipzig under
Wilhelm Wundt in 1892. Following his
doctoral studies, Witmer returned to the University
of Pennsylvania to become director of
their psychology laboratory.
Witmer became the first psychologist to
use his understanding of the principles of
human
behavior to help an individual with
a particular problem. He was asked by a
teacher to help one of her students who
was
not performing well in school. After assessing
the child’s problem, Witmer developed a
Foundations and Early History of Clinical Psychology 39
specific treatment program. He found that the
child had difficulty in spelling, reading, and
memory, and recommended tutoring, which
later proved to be a successful intervention
(McReynolds, 1987).
In 1896, Witmer described his methods
of diagnosis and treatment to members of
the newly formed APA. He proposed that a
psychological clinic could be devoted to diagnosis
and evaluation, individual treatment,
public service, research, and the training of
students. Apparently, his thoughts were not
well received by his professional colleagues at
the time (Brotemarkle, 1947; Reisman, 1976).
His colleagues disliked the notion that psychology
as a science should be applied to
actual clinical problems. It is important to
note that during this time, psychology was
considered a science and its purpose was to
better understand general (not abnormal or
dysfunctional) human behavior. Despite the
lukewarm reception, Witmer independently
developed his psychological clinic at the University
of Pennsylvania along with programs
to assist children with primarily school-related
difficulties and challenges.
Many of the principles that Witmer developed
in his psychological clinic are still used
today. For example, he favored a diagnostic
evaluation prior to offering treatment
procedures and services. He favored a
multidisciplinary team approach as opposed
to individual consultation. He used interventions
and diagnostic strategies based on
research evidence. Finally, he was interested
in preventing problems before they emerged.
Highlight of a Contemporary Clinical Psychologist
Rev. Gerdenio ‘‘Sonny’’ Manuel, SJ, PhD
Photo: Courtesy Rev.
Gerdenio Manuel
As a clinical psychologist, Catholic priest, and university professor,
Fr. Manuel’s general area of interest is higher education, particularly
curricular and co-curricular programs that enable faculty and students
to develop the habits of mind and heart that lead them to reflective
engagement with the world and that deepen their commitment to
fashioning a more humane and just world, especially for those in greatest
need.
Birth Date: June 8, 1951
College: University of San Francisco (BA, Political Science), 1971
Graduate Program: Duke University (MA, PhD, Clinical Psychology),
1985
Clinical Internship: Cambridge Hospital/Harvard University School of
Medicine (1984–1985)
Postdoctoral Fellowship: Cambridge Hospital/Harvard University
School of Medicine (1985–1986)
Current Job: Rector, Santa Clara University Jesuit Community
Pros and Cons of Being a Clinical Psychologist:
Pros: ‘‘Insight into life and life’s meaning, an appreciation of the lights,
shadows, and dreams of human life.’’
Cons: ‘‘Allowing oneself spontaneity in nonclinical situations; it’s hard to
give up the therapist role in off hours.’’
40 Foundations and Fundamentals
Future of Clinical Psychology: ‘‘The role
of clinical psychology will be enhanced as we
continue to strive for ways to stay in touch
with our humanity and deepest desires in
an increasingly technological and stress- and
strife-filled world.’’
Typical Schedule:
8:00 E-mail correspondence
9:00 University or Jesuit Community meetings
11:00 Clinical consultation–individual and
groups
12:00 Working lunch—University trustees,
faculty groups, etc.
2:00 Teaching Clinical Foundations of Pastoral
Counseling
3:00 Writing and research
5:30 Liturgy, prayer
8:00 Pastoral counseling, spiritual direction
By 1904, the University of Pennsylvania
began offering formal courses in clinical psychology.
In 1906, Morton Price published
the first edition of the Journal of Abnormal
Psychology. By 1907, Witmer began the first
professional journal dedicated to the field of
clinical psychology, entitled The Psychological
Clinic. Through these activities and landmark
events clinical psychology was born. However,
while Witmer helped launch the clinical psychology
specialty, a variety of other people
and events further molded clinical psychology
into its current form.
The Influence of Binet’s
Intelligence Test
In 1885, Alfred Binet, a French scientist and
attorney, founded (along with Henri Beaunis)
the first psychology laboratory in France. Binet
and his colleagues were especially interested in
developing tests to investigate mental abilities
in children. In 1904, a French commission
invited Binet and his colleague, Theodore
Simon, to develop a method to assist in
providing mentally disabled children with
appropriate educational services. Binet and
Simon developed an intelligence test that
could be used with children in order to assist
teachers and schools in identifying children
whose mental abilities prevented them from
benefiting
from regular classroom instruction.
The Binet-Simon scale was then developed
in 1908 specifically for school use. Binet felt
that the test did not provide a comprehensive
and objective index of intellectual functioning
and highlighted the limitations of his testing
methods for use beyond the classroom.
Henry Goddard, who had developed a clinic
for children at the Vineland Training School
in New Jersey, learned about the Binet-
Simon scale while in Europe during 1908.
He was impressed with the scale and brought
it back to the United States for translation and
use. In 1916, Stanford University psychologist
Lewis Terman revised the scale and renamed
it the Stanford-Binet. The Binet approach
to testing became remarkably popular in
the United States, as various institutions
throughout the country adopted the Binet-
Simon and later the Stanford-Binet tests to
assess children.
By 1914, over 20 university
psychology clinics were utilizing the Binet
approach. Measuring the intellectual abilities
of children quickly became a major activity of
clinical psychologists during the early days of
the field.
The Influence of the Mental Health
and Child Guidance Movement
The momentum achieved through the emergence
of psychological clinics and psychological
testing soon progressed into the realm
of mental illness and problematic behavior.
A former mental patient, Clifford Beers, who
may be credited with the expansion, founded
the National Committee for Mental Hygiene,
which later became known as the National
Association for Mental Health. Beers was hospitalized
with severe depression that also included
episodes of mania. Today, he would
have likely been diagnosed with bipolar disorder
(manic depression). His treatment, from a
contemporary viewpoint, would be considered
Foundations and Early History of Clinical Psychology 41
inhumane although it was common at the
time. Once he was released from the hospital,
he wrote a book entitled A Mind That Found
Itself, published in 1908. The book focused
on the inhumane treatment he experienced
while hospitalized. The mission of his posthospitalization
life and his newly founded
association was to improve the treatment of
those suffering from mental illness.
Beers and his organization were successful
due in part to the support of prominent psychologist
and Harvard professor William James
and prominent psychiatrist Adolf Meyer. This
success led to the opening of William Healy’s
Juvenile Psychopathic Institute in 1909 and
to the subsequent establishment of child guidance
clinics throughout the country. Unlike
Witmer’s focus on learning differences and
educational challenges, the child guidance
clinics, such as the one developed by Healy,
focused on disruptive behaviors of children interacting
with schools, police, and the courts.
The philosophy of these clinics was based on
the view that disruptive behavior in children
was due to mental illness and that intervention
should occur early before significant
problems such as stealing, fire setting, and
robbery began. In 1917, Healy founded the influential
Judge Baker Foundation in Boston,
Massachusetts. The child guidance movement
applied the new principles of psychology to
the treatment of children and their families
encountering mental illness
and problem behaviors.
Thus, the child guidance perspective
helped to emphasize the psychological and social
influences of behavior and mental illness.
The Influence of
Sigmund Freud
in America
The work and writings of Sigmund Freud
(1856–1939) and his colleagues were highly
influential in further understanding the connection
between the mind and body. Freud
proposed that unconscious conflicts and emotional
influences could bring about mental
and physical illness. Freud reawakened earlier
Greek notions that a more holistic view of
health and illness including the study of emotional
experience was necessary for a fuller
understanding
of health, illness, and abnormal
behavior. Freud’s 1900 publication of The Interpretation
of Dreams resulted in mainstream
acceptance of the psychoanalytic perspective.
Freud had little influence on the development
of clinical psychology in the United
States until September 1909. At that time,
Freud made his landmark and only trip to
the United States in response to an invitation
by G. Stanley Hall (the APA’s first president
and president of Clark University in Worcester,
Massachusetts). Clark University was celebrating
its twentieth anniversary as an institution
and Hall invited a large number of prominent
psychologists, psychiatrists, and academics for
a series of lectures. In addition to Sigmund
Freud, Carl Jung, Otto Rank, Sandor Ferenczi,
James McKeen Cattell, E. B. Titchener, and
William James were also in attendance—a
veritable ‘‘who’s who’’ of influential names
at the time. This conference stimulated the
widespread acceptance of Freud’s psychoanalytic
theories in the United States. The psychological
and child guidance clinics, quickly
growing in the United States at the time,
tended to adopt Freud’s orientation to mental
illness and treatment after the 1909 lectures.
Thus, the psychoanalytic perspective to behavioral
and mental problems was highlighted
in these clinics. Furthermore, the enthusiasm
afforded psychological testing in the wake of
the Binet-Simon scale grew dramatically during
this period as well.
The American Psychological Association
and Early Clinical Psychology
The first two decades of the twentieth century
witnessed tremendous growth in the
field of clinical psychology. During this time,
the APA was interested primarily in scientific
research in academic settings and was
largely disinterested in clinical applications
in the field. Therefore, these rapid developments
in the provision of psychological
services in psychological clinics and child
42 Foundations and Fundamentals
SPOTLIGHT
Sigmund Freud
Sigmund Freud was born in what is now Austria on May 6, 1856, and
spent most of his childhood in Vienna. He came from a large family and
was the oldest of seven children. He appeared to have been the favorite
child, getting attention and perks that other children in the family didn’t
get. Like many Jews at the time, he experienced discrimination that led
him to make certain life sacrifices. For example, he wanted to become a
university professor but, as a Jew, he was unable to pursue this desire
since Jews were not allowed these types of positions at the time. He
chose medicine as an alternative and completed his medical degree at
the University of Vienna in 1881. He initially was attracted to research
endeavors and published several medical articles but eventually switched
to private practice. Freud was not a psychologist or a psychiatrist; he was a
neurologist. He married Martha Bernays and had six children; one, Anna,
became a well-known psychoanalyst.
Freud’s most notable books include Studies on Hysteria (published in
1895) and The Interpretation of Dreams (published in 1900). His influence
grew and by the early 1900s he was highly respected. The influence of his
thinking, writing, and theories had grown enormously in the professional
community. He made one trip to the United States in 1909 to give a series
of lectures at Clark University in Wooster, Massachusetts. Curiously, it
was a trip he later regretted due to the hassles of such travel with few
rewards.
Freud had two great loves: antiquities and cigars. His office was full
of small antiquities and he spent a great deal of time (and money) on
his hobby. Although his love of cigars resulted in throat cancer and a
number of years of pain and surgeries, he found it impossible to give up
the unhealthy habit that ultimately killed him. Due to Nazi persecution,
he fled Austria in 1938 and moved to a residential neighborhood in north
London where he continued writing and seeing patients until just a few
days before his death in September 1939. His London home is now a
museum where many of his antiquities as well as his famous couch and
desk can still be viewed.
guidance clinics were generally ignored by the
association.
The growth of clinical psychology therefore
occurred not because of the APA but in spite
of it. Clinicians frustrated with the lack of
interest and support by the APA decided to
leave the organization and form the American
Association of Clinical Psychologists (AACP) in
1917. This separation did not last and in 1919,
the AACP and APA agreed to a reconciliation
of sorts and the AACP rejoined the APA as a
clinical section.
The Influence of World War I
When the United States entered World War I
in 1917, a large number of recruits needed
to be classified based on their intellectual
and psychological functioning. The U.S. Army
Foundations and Early History of Clinical Psychology 43
Medical Department contacted the current
president of the APA (Robert Yerkes) to assist
in developing an appropriate test for the
military recruits. A committee was formed
that included Henry Goddard, Lewis Terman,
and Guy Whipple (who had published a book
entitled Manual of Mental and Physical Tests in
1910). The committee developed what became
known as the Army Alpha and Army Beta
intelligence tests. The Army Alpha was a verbal
test while the Army Beta was a nonverbal test.
Unlike intelligence tests such as the Stanford-
Binet that could be administered to only
one subject at a time, the Army Alpha and
Army Beta tests could be administered to very
large groups of people. Furthermore, the tests
could be used for both literate and nonliterate
adults. To assess psychological functioning, the
committee suggested that the Psychoneurotic
Inventory (developed by Robert Woodworth
in 1917) also be used. Approximately two
million people were evaluated using these
tests by 1918. This opportunity for psychology
to contribute to the war effort through the
application of psychological tests increased the
status and visibility of psychologists and of
psychological testing.
Clinical Psychology between
the World Wars
Psychological Testing
Following World War I, psychologists became
well known for their testing skills (Kiesler
& Zaro, 1981; B. A. Maher & W. B. Maher,
1985b). A testing development explosion
occurred, such that by 1940 over 500 psychological
tests had been produced. These tests included
both verbal and nonverbal intelligence
tests, personality and psychological functioning
tests, and career interest and vocational
skill tests. Tests were available for children
of all ages and abilities as well as for adults.
The more popular and well-known tests included
the Rorschach Inkblot Test (1921), the
Miller Analogies Test (1927), the Word Association
Test developed by Carl Jung (1919), the
Goodenough Draw-A-Man Test (1926), the
Thematic Apperception Test (1935), and the
Wechsler-Bellevue Intelligence Scale (1939).
In fact, testing boomed to such an extent
that in 1921, James McKeen Cattell founded
the Psychological Corporation to sell psychological
tests to various organizations and
professionals.
Projective testing became very popular with
the 1921 publication of Hermann Rorschach’s
Psychodiagnostik, the famous inkblot test.
Rorschach was a Swiss psychiatrist who died
shortly after the publication of his famous test.
In 1937, S. J. Beck and Bruno Klopfer both
published comprehensive scoring procedures
for the Rorschach Inkblot Test that facilitated
much more research to be conducted using the
instrument. In 1939, David Wechsler developed
the first comprehensive and individually
administered intelligence test for adults. The
Wechsler-Bellevue (and subsequent revisions)
quickly became the standard measure with
which to assess adult intellectual abilities.
By the 1930s, 50 psychological clinics and
about 12 child guidance clinics were operating
in the United States. By the end of the 1930s,
some clinical psychologists began to offer their
professional services to clients and patients in
private practice.
Psychotherapy
The early work of clinical psychologists involved
primarily psychological and intellectual
testing. Psychotherapy and other treatment
services for those suffering from mental illness
were conducted primarily by psychiatrists.
Most psychotherapy during this time
utilized Freud’s psychoanalytic principles and
techniques. Although Freud disagreed (Freud,
1959), psychiatrists in the United States believed
that only physicians could adequately
provide psychotherapy, thus preventing clinical
psychologists and other nonphysicians
from conducting psychotherapy services. In
fact, it wasn’t until a major lawsuit in the late
1980s that psychologists won the right to be
44 Foundations and Fundamentals
admitted as full members of American psychoanalytic
institutes, resulting in their current
ability to conduct psychoanalysis with patients
(De Angelis, 1989). Prior to the lawsuit, most
psychoanalytic institutes admitting psychologists
required that they use their training for
research rather than clinical purposes.
Despite this initial prohibition, clinical psychologists
gradually began providing consultation
as an outgrowth of their assessment
work with children. Consultation as well as
treatment evolved naturally from the testing
process. Consultation with teachers, children,
and parents eventually led to the provision
of a full range of psychotherapy and other
intervention services. Unlike the psychoanalytic
treatment provided by psychiatrists at the
time, psychological treatment was more behavioral
in orientation, reflecting the research
developments in academic laboratories. For
example, in 1920, John Watson detailed the
well-known case of little Albert who was conditioned
to be fearful of white furry objects
(Watson & Rayner, 1920), while Mary Cover
Jones (1924) demonstrated how these types
of fears could be removed using conditioning
techniques.
Training
By the early 1940s, there were no official
training programs or policies regulating the
field of clinical psychology. Though the majority
of clinical psychologists had earned BA
degrees, very few had earned PhD or even
MA degrees. To be employed as a clinical psychologist,
one merely needed to have a few
courses in psychological testing, child development,
and abnormal psychology. The APA was
of little help because of their discomfort with
‘‘applied’’ psychology. The vast majority of the
APA membership still consisted of academics
primarily interested in research rather than
practice applications. However, in 1935, the
APA Committee on Standards of Training in
Clinical Psychology recommended that a PhD
and one year of supervised clinical experience
be required to become a clinical psychologist.
The recommendation was largely ignored because
the APA did nothing to enforce their
recommendation at that time (Shakow, 1947).
Organizational Split and New
Publications
As in 1917, a large group of clinicians again
left the APA in frustration during 1937 to
form a new organization, the American Association
of Applied Psychology (AAAP). History
repeated itself when this new organization rejoined
the APA, this time eight years later in
1945. The split between basic experimentalists
and those interested in applied areas of
psychology has ebbed and flowed throughout
psychology’s history. Nonetheless, clinical psychology
continued to develop and define itself.
The first clinical psychology textbook was published
in 1936 by Chauncey Louttit while the
Journal of Consulting Psychology (now called the
Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology) was
first published in 1937.
The Influence of World War II
With U.S. involvement in World War II, the
need to assess military recruits again became
pressing. As during World War I, a committee
of psychologists was formed to develop an
assessment procedure to efficiently evaluate
intellectual and psychological functioning as
well as other skills of potential soldiers (Maher
& Maher, 1985b). Reflecting the rapid development
in psychological testing since World
War I, the testing conducted during World War
II was much more extensive and sophisticated
than the Army Alpha and Army Beta used
earlier. The committee developed a groupadministered
intelligence test called the Army
General Classification Test. The committee also
recommended several other tests, such as the
Personal Inventory, which assessed psychiatric
problems, and brief versions of the Rorschach
Inkblot Test and the Thematic Apperception
Test to assess personality. Additionally, various
ability tests were used to assess military
officers and certain specialty military groups.
Foundations and Early History of Clinical Psychology 45
These tests were given to over 20 million people
during World War II (Reisman, 1976). Due
to the military’s desperate need for psychological
services beyond testing, psychologists
were called upon to provide other clinical services
such as psychotherapy and consultation
(Maher & Maher, 1985b; J. Miller, 1946).
In addition to the enormous needs of the
military during the war effort, additional advances
and developments were associated
with the growth of clinical psychology. For
example, new tests were developed such as the
Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory
(MMPI; Hathaway, 1943). The MMPI was developed
as an objective personality inventory
geared toward assessing psychiatric problems.
The MMPI and current revisions (MMPI-2,
MMPI-A) are among the most widely used
psychological tests today. In 1949, David
Wechsler published the Wechsler Intelligence
Scale for Children (WISC), which became the
first significant alternative to the well-known
and most often used Stanford-Binet. The current
version of the WISC (the WISC-IV) is
the most commonly used intelligence test for
children ages 6 to 16 given today.
In 1945, Connecticut became the first of
many states to pass a certification law for psychologists,
thereby launching the regulation of
the practice of clinical psychology among qualified
professionals. Thus, only those deemed
qualified by training and experience could call
themselves ‘‘psychologists’’ and offer services
to the public for a fee. In 1946, the first edition
of the American Psychologist was published,
and the American Board of Examiners in Professional
Psychology (ABEPP) was created to
certify psychologists. The ABEPP developed a
national examination for all clinical psychologists
seeking licensure. This frequently revised
examination is now used in every state.
The Big Picture
Although clinical psychology did not become
a specialty within psychology until 1896, the
many perspectives in understanding, assessing,
and treating emotional and behavioral
problems during the preceding centuries set
the stage for its development. Understanding
the influences of biological, psychological, and
social factors in the development and maintenance
of problem behavior and emotional
distress evolved over many years. Each generation
grappled with trying to best understand
the influences of various factors on behavior.
As more and more scientific discoveries were
revealed, theories about the relative importance
of biological, psychological, and social
factors in behavior and emotions were altered
to accommodate the most up-to-date discoveries
and thinking. However, historical events,
influential people, and social perspectives influenced
past and current thinking about topics
of interest to clinical psychology.
Prior to World War II, clinical psychology
was essentially defining itself, struggling with
its relationship with the APA, and making scientific
and clinical inroads. However, World
War II and especially the aftermath of the
war changed clinical psychology significantly.
Chapter 3 chronicles the history and development
of clinical psychology in modern times
following World War II.
Humankind has struggled inexorably to
make sense of human behavior in the context
of changing social, theological, and political
times. Changing notions of how the mind,
body, and environment interact to create mental
health and illness has developed through
fits and starts into the roots of our current
integrative appreciation for the dynamic interplay
of biological, psychological, and social
factors. Psychology as a science and clinical
psychology as a discipline emerged in these
early eras through experimentation, testing,
and, eventually, consultation and treatment.
Yet to come, however, is the modern era of
clinical psychology, and the exciting explosion
of ideas, methods, and practices applied to
human problems in our contemporary world.
Key Points
1. Before Lightner Witmer opened the first
psychological clinic at the University of
46 Foundations and Fundamentals
Pennsylvania and coined the term clinical
psychology in 1896, a number of events
during the course of history set the stage
for the development of clinical psychology
as a profession.
2. The ancient Greeks felt that the gods were
the cause of both health and illness and
that the mind and body were closely interconnected.
The famous Greek physician,
Hippocrates (460–370 B.C.), believed that
disease was primarily the result of an imbalance
of four bodily fluids or humors rather
than of spiritual factors.
3. During the Middle Ages (A.D. 500–1450),
the early notions of the relationship between
health, illness, mind, and body
returned. Disease and insanity, it was believed,
were caused by spiritual matters
such as the influence of demons and
witches and the results of sin.
4. During the Renaissance, renewed interest
in the physical and medical world emerged
once again with diminishing influences of
the supernatural or religious viewpoints.
New medical discoveries during the Renaissance
resulted in biomedical reductionism
in that disease, including mental illness,
could be understood by scientific observation
and experimentation rather than
beliefs about mind and soul.
5. It wasn’t until the work of Sigmund
Freud (1856–1939) and colleagues that
the connection between mind and body
reemerged. Freud demonstrated that unconscious
conflicts and emotional influences
could bring about diseases. As the
ancient Greeks believed, Freud reawakened
the notion that a more holistic view of
health, which included the role of emotional
life, was necessary to a fuller understanding
of health, illness, and abnormal
behavior.
6. Psychology was born when the first laboratory
of psychology was developed by Wilhelm
Wundt at the University of Leipzig,
Germany, in 1879. In 1890, William James
published Principles of Psychology, which became
the first classic psychology text, and
in 1892, the APA was founded and elected
G. Stanley Hall as its president.
7. The birth of clinical psychology occurred
in 1896 with the opening of the first psychological
clinic at the University of Pennsylvania
by Lightner Witmer (1867–1956).
Witmer became the first psychologist to use
his understanding of the principles of human
behavior to help an individual with
a particular problem: He was asked by a
teacher to help one of her students who
was not performing well in school.
8. Alfred Binet and Theodore Simon developed
an intelligence test that could be
used with children in order to assist teachers
and schools identify children whose
mental abilities prevented them benefitting
from regular classroom instruction.
The Binet-Simon scale was developed in
1908 specifically for school use. In 1916,
Stanford University psychologist Lewis Terman
revised the scale and renamed it
the Stanford-Binet. The Binet approach to
testing became remarkably popular in the
United States. Various institutions throughout
the country adopted the Binet-Simon
and later the Stanford-Binet approach to
assess children.
9. Former mental patient Clifford Beers
founded the National Committee for
Mental Hygiene, which was concerned
about the inhumane treatment mental
patients experience while hospitalized. The
mission of Beers’ post-hospitalization life
and his newly founded association was
to improve treatment for those suffering
from mental illness as well as assist in
the prevention of mental disorders. Beers
and his association founded the child
guidance movement, which used the new
principles of psychology to help children
and their families deal with mental illness
and problem behaviors.
10. During World War I and World War II,
millions of recruits needed to be evaluated
for psychological and intellectual functioning.
The military turned to psychology to
provide them with testing to evaluate the
troops.