학술논문

Counselors' Neuroscience Conceptualizations of Depression.
Document Type
Article
Source
Journal of Mental Health Counseling. Jul2019, Vol. 41 Issue 3, p260-279. 20p.
Subject
*COUNSELORS
*NEUROSCIENCES
*OPEN-ended questions
*COUNSELOR-client relationship
*NEUROPLASTICITY
Language
ISSN
1040-2861
Abstract
The authors conducted the first-ever study into counselor conceptualization of client problems using neuroscience theories. The authors selected an embedded mixed-methods design. Participants (N = 334) provided quantitative demographic information and responded to an open-ended qualitative question regarding a hypothetical situation of a client asking the counselor to explain depression from a neuroscience perspective. The authors coded, tallied, and transformed qualitative responses to quantitative data via frequency counts. Kappa coefficients for the coding team exceeded the threshold for acceptable reliability. Approximately half of the counselors applied neuroscience theories to explain client experiences o f depression (97.7%, n = 194), and some counselors integrated multiple neuroscience theories in their response (23.2%, n = 45). The monoamine and neuroplasticity theories were the two most common neuroscience theories for depression. Implications for research and training are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]