The future of sex therapy: Specialization or marginalization?
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
12-2009
Publication Title
Archives of Sexual Behavior
Volume
38
Issue
6
First page number:
1016
Last page number:
1027
Abstract
Sex therapy’s claims to specialization may be exaggerated and ultimately damaging to the integrated treatment of sexual dysfunction. In fact, sex therapy does not have a unified underlying theory, a unique set of practices, or an empirically demonstrated efficacious treatment outcome. Paradoxically, the practice of sex therapy has gained widespread professional and popular acceptance since the publication in 1970 of Human Sexual Inadequacy by Masters and Johnson. Consequences of the widespread acceptance of this supposed specialization include the marginalization of sex therapy from other forms of treatment and the perpetuation of the notion that sex therapy is a special form of therapy requiring highly specialized training. This specialization focus also helps to perpetuate societal discomfort with sexuality. The very modest empirical success of most so-called sex therapy interventions and the lack of theoretical development suggest that sex therapy needs a recalibration in order to survive. It is suggested that the treatment of sexual dysfunction be integrated into the general psychotherapy enterprise and into a multidisciplinary biopsychosocial framework.
Keywords
Mental health counseling; Psychosexual disorders; Psychosexual disorders—Treatment; Sex therapy; Sexual disorders
Disciplines
Counseling Psychology | Health Psychology | Medicine and Health | Other Rehabilitation and Therapy | Psychiatry and Psychology | Psychology
Language
English
Permissions
Use Find in Your Library, contact the author, or use interlibrary loan to garner a copy of the article. Publisher copyright policy allows author to archive post-print (author’s final manuscript). When post-print is available or publisher policy changes, the article will be deposited
Repository Citation
Binik, Y. M.,
Meana, M.
(2009).
The future of sex therapy: Specialization or marginalization?.
Archives of Sexual Behavior, 38(6),
1016-1027.