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from Ethical Issues

Psychiatric Association Issues Expanded Position Statement on Reparative Therapy

The A.P.A. Trustees has endorsed an expanded position statement on sexual-reorientation therapy which reiterates the association's view that homosexuality is not a mental disorder. Any effort to view it as such, the A.P.A. says, stems not from scientific evidence, but from a political and moral effort to discredit the growing acceptance of homosexuality in society. This latest statement strengthens and expands the A.P.A.'s 1998 statement against reorientation therapy.

The new statement claims that "there are no scientifically rigorous outcome studies to determine either the actual efficacy or the harm of 'reparative' treatments." What literature does exist , they say, takes the form of "anecdotal reports of individuals who have claimed to change, people who claim that attempts to change were harmful to them, and others who claimed to have changed and then later recanted those claims."

The APA warns therapists not to influence the course of therapy even subtley toward the choice of sexual-reorientation therapy. "Ethical practitioners," the statement says, "refrain from attempts to change individuals' sexual orientation." After 40 years of studies on sexual reorientation, the A.P.A. claims, there is no evidence of efficacy.

NARTH's president Joseph Nicolosi strongly disagreed. "A scientific debate won't be settled through arm's length discussion," he said. "Let's open up the debate and look at the evidence scientifically. There is indeed a body of evidence in the literature supporting the reality of change, and NARTH's ongoing research continues to build on that prior evidence."

"Instead of studying reorientation therapy by listening to both sides, the APA cancelled a debate at its Chicago meeting which would have looked at the ethicality and effectiveness of treatment," he added. "We're challenging the APA to dialogue with us and to listen to people who have made the shift. Instead, they're simply shutting out their voices."

Calling reparative therapy the "laetrile of the mental-health professions," prominent gay psychiatrist Jack Drescher, M.D., said reparative therapy should be treated like that now-debunked cancer treatment. Dr. Drescher was one of the psychiatrists who crafted the latest A.P.A. statement.

Dr. Nicolosi said the new A.P.A. statement is evidence that gay activists have positioned themselves as spokesmen for the psychiatric profession. "Naturally," he said, "this issue is of great political and personal importance to gay activists. But science can't be led by the interests of any one group on any divisive issue. Nor can it allow that group to shut down the scientific discussion."




Updated: 8 February 2008

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