C
chrysostim83
Guest
There’s one paragraph from the second link, Anti-Gay?! NARTH President Addresses Misperceptions about NARTH, which speaks volumes about why it is difficult to trust anything NARTH says:
Spitzer (2003) recruited subjects who claimed to have been helped by sexual conversion therapy. This was appropriate for Spitzer’s research question, “Has even one homosexual person changed his or her sexual orientation through therapy?”, but absolutely nothing can be inferred about the harm this kind of therapy can do among the full population of persons who are currently trying it. It is true that Spitzer himself noted there were no signs of negative iatrogenic effects among the subjects he studied, but ultimately all that that means is that people who report having been helped by sexual conversion therapy are less likely to report having been harmed by it.
Jones and Yarhouse (2007) had a miserable retention rate: those who were harmed by their efforts to change (if anyone was) were likely to be among the dropouts, so Jones and Yarhouse can’t tell us anything about them.
Karten (2010) tells us nothing about harm (or the possibility of change for that matter) for the same reason as Spitzer (2003): the way the study was designed does not permit this kind of inference to be made. To find out more, read Throckmorton’s post here.
Taking the studies in turn:Although the APA Task Force reported that their review of the possibility for harm was inconclusive, there are in fact research studies which conclude that this type of therapy is not harmful. For example, the Spitzer (2003) study found no harm, the Jones and Yarhouse (2007) study on ministry groups found no harm, and the Karten (2010) study found no harm.
Spitzer (2003) recruited subjects who claimed to have been helped by sexual conversion therapy. This was appropriate for Spitzer’s research question, “Has even one homosexual person changed his or her sexual orientation through therapy?”, but absolutely nothing can be inferred about the harm this kind of therapy can do among the full population of persons who are currently trying it. It is true that Spitzer himself noted there were no signs of negative iatrogenic effects among the subjects he studied, but ultimately all that that means is that people who report having been helped by sexual conversion therapy are less likely to report having been harmed by it.
Jones and Yarhouse (2007) had a miserable retention rate: those who were harmed by their efforts to change (if anyone was) were likely to be among the dropouts, so Jones and Yarhouse can’t tell us anything about them.
Karten (2010) tells us nothing about harm (or the possibility of change for that matter) for the same reason as Spitzer (2003): the way the study was designed does not permit this kind of inference to be made. To find out more, read Throckmorton’s post here.