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Counselling and Psychotherapy Research
Linking research with practice
Volume 3, 2003 - Issue 3
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Original Articles

Experiencing gay affirmative therapy: An exploration of clients' views of what is helpful

Pages 211-215 | Published online: 18 Aug 2006
 

Gay affirmative therapy is a counselling approach that emphasises an affirming, non-pathologising approach to therapeutic work with lesbian, gay and bisexual clients. In this study, lesbian and gay clients who had experienced counselling that they defined as affirming identified what they perceived to have been helpful. Questionnaires and interviews were used to collect the views of a sample of lesbian, gay and bisexual informants. The material gathered was analysed using a grounded theory approach, which generated six main categories: communicating a non-pathologising perspective on homosexuality; the counselling relationship; the counselling space; what the counsellor brought to the relationship; humanity; and the counsellor adopting a holistic approach. Some of these identified affirming elements are unique to gay affirmative therapy and cannot be attributed to other factors. The possible significance of the findings for practitioners is discussed.

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