1.3.2 Evaluation of aversion therapy Flashcards
What did Miller do to try and find the effectivness of aversion therapy
In a study of alchoholics Miller compared the effectivness of 3 types of treatment:
- Aversion therapy
- Counseling therapy + aversion therapy
- Counselling alone
What did Miller find
One year later the recovery was the same for all groups, indicating aversion therapy offers no benefit over counselling
What did Smith et al find about alchholics treated with aversion therapy
They had higher abstinence rates after a year compared to those who were treated with counselling alone
What did Smith et al find about the effectiveness of aversion therapy on smokers
In a group of 300 smokers 52% maintained abstinence after a year
What did Bancroft find
- High dropout rate
- 50% of patients either refuse treatment or drop out of aversion therapy
What conclusions can be made from Bancrofts findings
Makes it difficult to evaluate aversion therapy if only willing patients engage with the therapy
Are the effects of aversion therapy long term
- This is questionable as the effects are unlikely to transfer to the outside world when the punishing consequences of sickness enhancing drugs or electric shocks have disapeared
- Research on classical conditioning by Pavlov showed that a conditioned response is extinguished when the CS is no longer paired with the UCS
What is a problem with aversion therapy in terms of treating the underying cause (symptom subsititution)
- It fails to treat the underlying cause
- Behaviourist approach believes that the maladaptive behaviour is disorder and therefor there are no underlying causes to be treated
- The consequences of this are the original symptoms may be removed but they may reaper in a differnt for say as gambling addiction
- The underlying cause has not been treated
- Symptom substitution
Is aversion therapy ethical in terms of consent?
Pateints usually give valid consent and have the right to withdraw
Do patients suffer physical harm?
YES - when they are exposed to the adverse stimulus (nausia, pain from electric shocks etc)
Do patients suffer psychological harm?
Yes - their anxiety will increase during therapy
How was aversion therapy used unethically in the past
- Was used to try to ‘cure’ homosexuality
- Wasnt until 2006 when amercian psychiatric association considerd it unethical
- Involved pps being given drugs to make them feel nauseous as well as being placed in dirty surroundings while being shown pin-up pictures of males
- It was thought this would create a negative assocation and turn them ‘straight’
Give a real life example of aversion therapy being unethically used to treat homosexuality
- In 1962 Billy Clegg Hill dies after he had undergone aversion therapy to ‘cure’ his homosexuality
- He died from a coma and convulsions caused by a vomit inducing drug