Abstract
Pluralistic therapy is a relatively new form of psychotherapy where counsellors and clients work together to achieve clients’ goals through collaboration and preference accommodation, drawing on a range of therapy methods (Cooper & McLeod, 2011). This pilot study looks at data collected from a counselling research centre to investigate the effectiveness of pluralistic therapy in reducing clinical symptoms for well-being in a primary care setting, with the aim to support the establishment of processes for evaluation of pluralistic therapy.
Pre- and post-counselling CORE-OM, GAD-7, and PHQ-9 outcome measurement scores were compared for 45 clients. In the absence of a control group, results were benchmarked against studies with similar participant groups (Armstrong, 2010; Mullin et al., 2006; Barkham et al., 2013; Cooper et al., 2015).
Of those with a CORE score above clinical level at intake, 62.1% of clients showed either reliable improvement or recovery. 70.8% of clients’ GAD-7 scores and 65.5% of clients’ PHQ-9 scores showed either reliable improvement or recovery. Client CORE, GAD-7, and PHQ-9 scores decreased significantly over time, from pre- to post-intervention.
CORE improvement-only rates were higher, while recovery rates were lower compared to benchmarks. GAD-7 and PHQ-9 score reductions were similar to those found in a comparable study looking at pluralistic therapy for depression (Cooper et al., 2015). These findings are a helpful starting point from which to develop research on the effectiveness of pluralistic therapy.
Pre- and post-counselling CORE-OM, GAD-7, and PHQ-9 outcome measurement scores were compared for 45 clients. In the absence of a control group, results were benchmarked against studies with similar participant groups (Armstrong, 2010; Mullin et al., 2006; Barkham et al., 2013; Cooper et al., 2015).
Of those with a CORE score above clinical level at intake, 62.1% of clients showed either reliable improvement or recovery. 70.8% of clients’ GAD-7 scores and 65.5% of clients’ PHQ-9 scores showed either reliable improvement or recovery. Client CORE, GAD-7, and PHQ-9 scores decreased significantly over time, from pre- to post-intervention.
CORE improvement-only rates were higher, while recovery rates were lower compared to benchmarks. GAD-7 and PHQ-9 score reductions were similar to those found in a comparable study looking at pluralistic therapy for depression (Cooper et al., 2015). These findings are a helpful starting point from which to develop research on the effectiveness of pluralistic therapy.
Original language | English |
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Journal | Pluralistic Practice |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 4 Jun 2025 |
Bibliographical note
The authors would like to thank the therapists and clients working at the Tayside Centre for Counselling at Abertay University.Keywords
- pluralistic counselling
- psychotherapy
- therapy effectiveness
- primary care
- counselling psychology
- integration