2002
DOI: 10.1002/j.2161-1882.2002.tb00204.x
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Time‐Limited Counseling Outcome in a Nationwide College Counseling Center Sample

Abstract: This study examined the dose-effect relationship between the number of sessions and therapeutic outcome in a large, nationwide counseling center research consortium. A positive relationship was found between the outcome of counseling and the number of sessions attended. The results of this study support the effectiveness of brief psychotherapy. In recent years, the dose-response metaphor borrowed from pharmacology research has gained prominence in psychotherapy outcome research, as well (see Jones, Bigelow, & … Show more

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Cited by 75 publications
(61 citation statements)
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“…There were only 15 participants in the complete-data sample. Although such client loss is consistent with prior research (e.g., Draper et al, 2002;Ghetie, 2007;Lucas, 2012;Mahon et al, 2015), it was none-the-less discouraging. The four-year data collection has stopped due to several reasons, including the UCC moving to a new location and some key staff turnover, but general lack of client response was the primary issue.…”
Section: Study Limitationssupporting
confidence: 85%
“…There were only 15 participants in the complete-data sample. Although such client loss is consistent with prior research (e.g., Draper et al, 2002;Ghetie, 2007;Lucas, 2012;Mahon et al, 2015), it was none-the-less discouraging. The four-year data collection has stopped due to several reasons, including the UCC moving to a new location and some key staff turnover, but general lack of client response was the primary issue.…”
Section: Study Limitationssupporting
confidence: 85%
“…Although such client loss is consistent with prior research (e.g., Draper et al, 2002;Ghetie, 2007;Lucas, 2012;Mahon et al, 2015), it is none-the-less discouraging. Natural client attrition due to treatment, i.e., clients sufficiently resolving their mental health issue in a short time period, played a large role in these sample size decreases over time.…”
Section: Study Limitationssupporting
confidence: 83%
“…Since the introduction of the dose-effect relationship, numerous researchers have explored this relationship in a range of different populations and using varied methodologies (e.g. Barkham et al, 1996;Barkham et al, 2006;Callahan & Hynan, 2005;Draper, Jennings, Baron, Erdur, & Shankar, 2002;Hansen & Lambert, 2003;Kadera, Lambert, & Andrews, 1996;Kopta, Howard, Lowry, & Beutler, 1994;Lambert, Hansen, & Finch, 2001;Lambert, Okiishi, Finch, & Johnson, 1998;Lueger, Lutz, & Howard, 2000;Wolgast, Lambert, & Puschner, 2003).…”
Section: Dose-effect Modelmentioning
confidence: 99%