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In The Media

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  • INSUFFICIENT EVIDENCE TO SUPPORT SEXUAL ORIENTATION CHANGE EFFORTS

    Insufficient evidence to support sexual orientation change efforts.

    A new APA resolution, based on an extensive literature review, advises against therapy to change sexual orientation.

    By Christopher Munsey (Monitor staff)

    October 2009, Monitor on Psychology

                Mental health professionals should avoid telling clients they can change their sexual orientation through therapy or other treatments, according to a resolution adopted by the APA’s Council of Representatives on Aug. 5 during APA’s 2009 Annual Convention. The resolution was based on the recommendation of the APA Task Force on Appropriate Therapeutic Responses to Sexual Orientation, which reviewed decades of research and found insufficient evidence that such treatments work.

                Instead of telling clients that they can change, therapists should help them find ways to become more comfortable with their sexual orientation, the resolution states. It also advises parents and guardians to avoid treatments that portray homosexuality as a mental illness or developmental disorder.

                Beginning in February 2007, the six-member task force reviewed and updated APA’s 1997 resolution on the issue. The group first examined 83 peer-reviewed articles published between 1960 and 1978, according to task force chair Judith Glassgold, PsyD, a former president of Div. 44 (Society for the Psychological Study of Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Issues), with more than 20 years of experience working with clients struggling with their sexual orientation.

                The task force found numerous methodological problems with much of the so-called change therapy research published to date. Only a few studies were well designed, and only one of the older studies assessed treatment outcomes in comparison to an untreated control group. The task force then examined studies conducted in the last 10 years and found that due to methodological problems, most failed to show that reported changes were caused by treatment rather than other factors, Glassgold said, For instance, recent studies lacked representative samples of people seeking to change their sexual orientation and instead used convenience samples such as participants recruited through the Internet or religious programs specifically organized to help people seeking to change their orientation, she said.
                A few older studies suggested that some people can learn to ignore or limit their same-sex attractions, but that was unlikely to be the case for those individuals who were initially attracted only to their own sex.

                The task force also drew a distinction between sexual orientation and sexual orientation identity, said Glassgold, noting that some people who are attracted to members of their own sex choose to identify themselves as heterosexuals.

                “There really is no evidence that orientation can change, [or that you can change] who you’re attracted to or who you fall in love with,” she said.

                In addition, some participants in sexual orientation change efforts reported an exacerbation of distress and depression when such efforts failed, she said.

                The task force also looked at how therapists can help people who are distressed by their sexual orientation in ways that do not attempt to change that orientation. Despite growing social acceptance of homosexuality, some people, particularly men from an evangelical or fundamentalist faith tradition, can’t reconcile their sexual orientation with their religious beliefs, Glassgold said. Therapists can help by teaching such clients active coping skills, reconciling religious and sexual orientation identities and helping them develop social support networks so they feel less isolated, she said.

                When working with clients who want to change their sexual orientation, practitioners need to acknowledge and explore the stigma and bigotry still experienced by gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender people, Glassgold said.

                The task force also found that coercive approaches to change teens’ sexual orientation – particularly involuntary residential programs – are “contrary to current clinical and professional standards,” she said. And parents should avoid programs that claim to prevent adult homosexuality by teaching gender conformity since there is no evidence for the effectiveness of such programs.

                “It’s really important for practitioners to try to increase parental acceptance of their children and encourage families to love their children despite any outcome of a child’s identity…. There is evidence that parental rejection increases mental health problems in children,” Glassgold said.

                Warren Throckmorton, PhD, an associate professor of psychology and fellow at the Center for Vision and Values at Grove City College in Grove City, Pa. , described the task force’s work as a “well-done effort.”

                “I felt the treatment of religion was very respectful, and in doing so, it created space for clients of conservative religious faith to explore the reality of their sexual orientation, while maintaining their faith commitments,” said Throckmorton, who researches sexual orientation and homosexuality and writes about such issues from a Christian perspective.

                Julie Harren Hamilton, PhD, president of the National Association for Research and Therapy of Homosexuality (NARTH), said she appreciated what she described as the taks force’s recognition that clients have a right to self-determination, and its respect for religious diversity. But she disagreed with the task force’s main conclusions, and charged that the task force was composed only of members opposed to sexual orientation change efforts.

                “We believe that if the task force had been more neutral in their approach, they could have arrived at only once conclusion, that homosexuality is not invariably fixed in all people, that some people can and do change,” she said.

     

  • WANTED: BETTER RESEARCH ON TODAY'S GAY AND LESBIAN TEENS

    Wanted: Better research on today’s gay and lesbian teens

    The current literature does not give us an accurate picture of today’s gay and lesbian teenagers, human development professor Ritch Savin-Williams, PhD, said during a plenary at APA’s 2009 Annual Convention.

    For example, very few of these teens follow coming-out trajectories described by past research, he said. “They just don’t map onto the lives of gay youth,” said Savin-Williams. “If the people we are studying don’t fit what we are doing, maybe something is wrong.”

    Some of the research is simply too negative, said Savin-Williams, who chairs the human development department at Cornell University

    . Researchers have focused heavily on the differences between gay and straight teens and on the risks associated with coming out, he said. But such work ignores the “incredibly healthy gay kids out there who are leaders, football players, basketball players, dancers, artists, American Idols.”

    A more productive research approach would be to study gay teens’ intelligence, creativity and positive friendships. There’s some evidence, for example, that gay teens show more diversity in their friendships than straight teens, he said.

    Knowing more about this and other strengths – such as why many gay teens to be artistic – could aid all adolescents.

    “The finger points directly at me as well,” said Savin-Williams. “But if we are going to do research on gay youth, why not look at these, good, resilient, positive, ordinary things?”

    - J. Chamberlin

     

  • Coming Out - With Notes from Christopher Greenwood of Diversity of Rockford

    Friday, Sep 7, 2007 @08:02pm CDT


    Diversity22007-09-07-1189213437.jpg

    Life in your twenties means learning more about yourself and letting others know who you are.

     

    For some that means coming out of the closet.

     

    Coming out of the closet wasn't easy for Patrick, which is not his real name.

    He says, "I waited until 29. It was society, family, it was looked down upon."

     Patrick says he works in a place where gays may not be accepted.  That’s why he asked that an alias be used. He says his family accepts him for his sexuality, though some friends didn't.

    He says, "It hurt. It hurt to know something like that would deter them from being my friend."

    Patrick turned to a support group for help.  Workers say people like Patrick aren't alone in feeling fear at first.

     "Coming out is not an easy process. We're afraid we're going to be judged." explains Christopher Greenwood with the group Diversity

    Coming out in your twenties has its own unique experience.

     “It’s easier for them to come out.  They have their own social network." explains Greenwood.

     "Support groups say ‘When you do come out, make sure you have a game plan for family and yourself." says Patrick.

    First of all, ask yourself if your family is prepared to hear what you have to say.

    Patrick says, "Make sure your family is ready. I believe individuals know when their family is ready."

    Greenwood advises, "If their family is going to react negatively, do you have a safe plan?  Do you have an exit out of your house, somewhere safe you can go to?"

    Patrick says he still deals with people who judge him for his sexuality.  But he says coming out is worth it.

    He says, "From that moment on, I felt pride and joy to be who I am."

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