moving with God's Spirit
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APA Council of Representatives Passes Resolution on So-Called Reparative Therapy
(Chicago, August 14, 1997).
Resolution Raises Ethical Concerns About Attempts to Change Sexual Orientation,
Reaffirms Psychology's Opposition to Homophobia
and Client's Rights to Unbiased Treatment
The Council of Representatives of the American Psychological Association
(APA) has passed a resolution affirming four basic principles
with regard to treatments to alter sexual orientation, so-called
conversion or reparative therapies.
These principles are:
The resolution further states that the APA "urges all mental
health professionals to take the lead in removing the stigma of
mental illness that has long been associated with homosexual orientation."
Supporters of the resolution, which passed the APA Council overwhelmingly
by a voice vote, believed that it was critical for the Association
to make such a statement due to the questions of the ethics, efficacy
and benefits of conversion therapy which are now being debated within the profession and within society as a whole.
"Our concern," stated Douglas Haldeman, Ph.D., President
of APA's Society for the Psychological Study Of Lesbian, Gay and
Bisexual Issues, "is that a person, especially a young person,
who enters into therapy to deal with issues of sexual orientation
should be able to have the expectation that such therapy would
take place in a professionally neutral environment absent of any
societal bias. Additionally, therapists should be providing clients
with accurate information about same-sex sexual orientation.
This resolution reasserts the profession's commitment to those
two principles."
The APA Council of Representatives is the major legislative and
policy-setting body of the organization. The American Psychological Association
(APA), in Washington, DC, is the largest scientific and professional
organization representing psychology in the United States and
is the world's largest association of psychologists. APA's membership
includes more than 151,000 researchers, educators, clinicians,
consultants and students. Through its divisions in 50 subfields
of psychology and affiliations with 58 state, territorial and
Canadian provincial associations, APA works to advance psychology
as a science, as a profession and as a means of promoting human
welfare.
APA Resolution press release
A Comment by Gregory M. Herek, Ph.D., a noted authority on antigay prejudice
Attempts to use psychological interventions to change sexual
orientation are based on the discredited claim that homosexuality is a
disease, a notion that represents an attempt to use the language of
science to promote antigay prejudice. That view is completely
inconsistent with the bulk of scientific research and with the official
policies of the American Psychological Association (APA) and the
American Psychiatric Association.
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