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Kathleen Weber's avatar

"For instance, many studies demonstrate that cognitive behavioral therapy (and other behavioral therapies) are as effective or more effective than medications. Yet, these behavioral therapies are underutilized as first-line treatments. Why?"

I think that the answer to this question is so obvious that I am deeply tempted to think that the question is rhetorical and Prof Rust is fully aware of the answer.

The answer is that dispensing a pill is the cheapest way to address virtually any medical issue—unless that pill is remarkably expensive.

Cognitive behavioral therapy involves at least some human intervention, which comes at a high hourly rate. Similarly, if sports coaching could be replaced by a pill that was half as effective, all sports coaching would quickly disappear except on the pro level (which of course includes Division I college sports).

Of course, it may soon be that an AI cognitive behavioral therapist will be as good as the median human cognitive behavioral therapist.

As it is, I received input for my own self-practice of cognitive behavioral therapy from reading two books on the subject several decades ago. This was a human intervention— but not one that every service user can take advantage of.

Incidentally, service user is marginally better than patient, but it is ghastly in its depersonalization and deemphasis on autonomy. Any use of the word service deemphasizes autonomy.)

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