ISU Department of Psychology receives grant to study spirituality and psychotherapy
Idaho State University’s Department of Psychology received a $50,871 grant from Brigham Young University to study psychotherapy with the integration of spirituality in treatment.
The grant comes from a larger grant given to BYU by the John Templeton Foundation, which is funding 22 similar studies across the globe.
ISU said the project will use the help of 11 private practice therapists in Idaho who already integrate spirituality into their psychotherapy. It will examine client preferences to see if clients are interested in spirituality being integrated into their treatment or if therapists integrate spirituality themselves, and then the outcomes of both.
Data will be collected from more than 1,200 clients and analyzed from an estimated 10,000 psychotherapy sessions. This will help ISU build a strong foundation on spirituality integration, which in turn will look at decisions on how to integrate spirituality into practice.
“We have done a lot of research on expectations and preferences, and their outcomes, but we have never done so with spiritual integration,” Joshua Swift, ISU assistant professor of psychology. “Research says it is successful, but it does not say when to integrate spirituality into treatment, so this will be new for us.”
Data collection for the project will begin in January and will be a two-year process.