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A Reply to Professor Warren Throckmorton concerning Reorientation TherapyC. Richard CarlsonC. Richard Carlson, HR, is a Licensed Marriage and Family Therapist and serves the Presbytery of Mid-Kentucky as a member of the PJC and the Church Administration Committee. |
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Several weeks ago Warren Throckmorton, PhD offered a response to my article Sexual Reparative (Conversion) Therapy Revisited with an article entitled Sexual Reorientation Therapy Reconsidered. While I appreciate the reasonable tone of his arguments in opposition to mine, they nevertheless contain many distortions regarding this current controversy. First, Dr. Throckmorton minimizes the harm done by reparative therapists. In his conclusion, he states that only the most black-and-white thinkers would advocate the elimination of interventions that have benefited many people because a few people report harm. Generally, I would agree with that statement. However, there are two things that make that a distortion of truth when applied to reparative therapy and reparative therapists.
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The first distortion has to do with the need for selection criteria for the treatment. |
The first distortion has to do with the need for selection criteria for the treatment. This is something that reparative therapists never even mention. In their view, everyone is a candidate who is willing to try. This hardly constitutes a scientific or ethically sound basis for treatment. To understand the second distortion, consider what happens when reparative therapy doesnt work - which according to Dr. Spitzer himself - would be most of the time, since the vast majority of gay persons would be unable to change. Persons, frequently full of self-loathing, find a therapist who agrees with them that there is indeed something wrong with them, that their sexual orientation is a sickness at best and a terrible sin at worst. They have come because newspaper ads and ex-gay ministries and many churches have proclaimed that they can change. The therapist tells them that change is possible if only they try hard enough, pray fervently enough and keep coming long enough. God, after all, wants them to change, and with God all things are possible. But change doesnt happen. What happens to their self-worth when the cash runs out and there is no reorientation? What happens when these children of God are unable to integrate their sexual identity with their faith and beliefs? We know what happens: at best, their self-loathing worsens; at worst,
drug and alcohol addiction, hospitalization for mental illness and suicide
happens. The harm goes tragically beyond distress. |
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Second, where is the evidence for sustained change? |
Second, where is the evidence for sustained change? In the past four decades, reparative therapists have not produced any rigorous scientific research to substantiate their claims of cure. I asked Jack Drescher, MD, Author, Training and Supervising Analyst at the William A. White Institute in NYC and a past president of the American Psychiatric Association to comment on Dr. Throckmortons clinical arguments: Dr. Throckmorton neglects to mention that despite the claims of
people like himself of innumerable people being helped by sexual conversion
therapists, that it was quite difficult for Dr. Spitzer to even find 200
subjects. First, Dr. Spitzers study lacks any claim of scientific
objectivity. Given that all of Spitzers data stemmed from a 45-minute
telephone interview, that there were no measures of pre- and post-treatment,
that there was no follow-up interview to see if peoples stories
remain unchanged, all one really sees are 200 subjects primarily recruited
by NARTH, who claimed that everything got better. Ones interpretation
of the data depends upon ones willingness to believe the subjects
who were recruited. By analogy, if an organization that opposed the strict
new antismoking regulations in New York City wanted to do a study
debunking the harmful effects of tobacco, they could situate themselves
outside a Manhattan cigar bar. Then one of the researchers could go in
and tell everyone inside about the study they were doing and why they
were doing it. They could then interview the first 200 people who walked
out, asking them if cigarette smoking had any harmful effects on them.
I can only imagine the objectivity of the data such a study would provide. |
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Third, Dr. Throckmorton quotes Dr. Spitzer as saying essentially that a gay activist group...has taken over the American Psychiatric Association |
Third, Dr. Throckmorton quotes Dr. Spitzer as saying essentially that a gay activist group, very strong and vocal, has taken over the American Psychiatric Association and there is nobody to give the other side. I asked Dr. Dresher about this: Dr. Spitzer, whom I consider a friend, currently occupies no official
position within the APA. Dr. Spitzer has no current knowledge of how APA
position statements are initiated or the lengthy vetting process they
must undergo before official APA adoption. The 2000 position statement,
for example, came out of the Commission on Psychotherapy by Psychiatrists
(COPP) which at the time was chaired by Dr. Glenn Gabbard, MD. One would
be hard pressed to make the case that a psychiatrist of Dr. Gabbards
stature is under the sway of a gay activist group as Dr. Throckmorton
claims. In fact, this commission studied the issue, modified and edited
it, then sent it on to the APA Board of Trustees for approval. After BOT
approval, it then went to the APA Assembly where psychiatric representatives
from around the country, the vast majority not gay, approved it. |
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Fourth, I asked Dr. Drescher to comment on Ray Fowlers statement, quoted by Dr. Throckmorton, that a client has the right to self-determination |
Fourth, I asked Dr. Drescher to comment on Ray Fowlers statement, quoted by Dr. Throckmorton, that a client has the right to self-determination. (Dr. Fowler is the Director of the American Psychological Association). Throckmorton neglects to point out that historically, sexual conversion therapists have tried to convince patients struggling with their sexual orientation that they should change. Anyone who has read the literature in this area will see the strong antigay bias in it. According to Shidlo and Schroeder, clients who saw sexual conversion therapists and who did not change were rarely referred to gay affirmative therapists. Dr. Throckmortons argument that undergoing conversion therapy is the decision of the client overlooks the obvious fact that professional organizations have an ethical obligation to protect clients from clinicians who engage in practices that fall outside the mental health mainstream. By analogy, a patient has the right to choose laetrile to treat his cancer. However, a physician who prescribes laetrile as the treatment of choice is in violation of professional standards and ethics. |
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Fifth, Dr. Throckmortons claim that mental health associations have politicized the issue of reparative therapy is ingenuous at best. |
Fifth, Dr. Throckmortons claim that mental health associations have politicized the issue of reparative therapy is ingenuous at best. In fact, those on the political and religious right are heavily invested in publicizing sexual conversion therapies as effective, primarily as it dovetails with their political position that homosexuality is not innate, that it should not be normalized and that gay people are not entitled to civil rights protection (that would represent special rights). As a matter of fact, Dr. Throckmortons research seems to have a bit of politicizing to it as he suggests that it is not sexual reorientation therapies which are harmful, but gay-affirmative ones. Perhaps the true reorientation therapy which is needed is one that helps the Church and society understand that homosexuality per se implies no impairment in judgment, stability, reliability, or general social or vocational capabilities and that homosexuality is a normal variant of human sexuality and not something bad needing to be fixed. That true reorientation therapy is simply the Good News of Gods wildly inclusive love in Jesus Christ.
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