The excitement engendered by psychotherapy has become severely diminished. Serious problems with effectiveness nearly preclude patient gain. A new and more powerful form of therapy is desperately needed. Against the need for a much stronger treatment frame, analystic construction has taken form that offers new levels of patient gain. This study pens by addressing the problems with treatment effectiveness before introducing that which offers a far stronger answer: analytic construction (as demonstrated in two brief but commanding case summaries. A critical section demonstrates how research, even reanalyses of many studies whch purportedly demonstrate effectiveness, show most treatments to offer little improvement. The use of near-science, the application of research-like forms of analysis and construed convergence,imdue psychotherapy with a greater array of more precise and effective forms of treatment. This stronger format allows traditional methods to be used,reconstrued, even superseded by other forms to maximize patient gain. Three powerful case studies demonstrate the strength embodied by analytic construction before a closing chapter speaks to this more powerful medium being urgently needed by the clinical community and,most critically, patients.
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