���Mike: Thanks for the clarification (and correction). I went searching 
for more info on Google, read through a couple of articles, then 
checked out the Cambridge Journals online, and thought I'd registered 
to view the articles. Checking back, I now see what I registered for 
was:

"Register to tailor Cambridge Journals Online to your precise needs and 
to take advantage of all our services." (!)

I then checked for the latest issue, and came up with the page I cited 
giving "Current Volume", which only went up to October 2009 – by which 
time I'd forgotten virtually everything that Mike posted. – Sorry Mike!

I see that the Abstract reads:

"Money is the default way in which intangible losses, such as pain and 
suffering, are currently valued and compensated in law courts. 
Economists have suggested that subjective well-being regressions can be 
used to guide compensation payouts for psychological distress following 
traumatic life events. We bring together studies from law, economic, 
psychology and medical journals to show that alleviating psychological 
distress through psychological therapy could be at least 32 times more 
cost effective than financial compensation. This result is not only 
important for law courts but has important implications for public 
health. Mental health is deteriorating across the world – improvements 
to mental health care might be a more efficient way to increase the 
health and happiness of our nations than pure income growth."

It seems from this that one thing that Boyce et al are suggesting is 
that instead of monetary compensation for pain and suffering courts 
would be better advised to award some months of "psychological 
therapy". This, apparently, is on the basis of the alleged considerable 
effectiveness of the said psychotherapy in improving well-being. As it 
reads (and admittedly without seeing the article I can't tell) as if 
the pain and suffering that leads people to seek psychotherapy is being 
taken as equivalent to the pain and suffering that leads people to seek 
compensation in a court of law. If so, it sounds a doubtful comparison 
to me. And I would love to see the "studies from…psychology and medical 
journals" that Boyce et al have used to arrive that their conclusions 
about the remarkable efficacy of psychological therapy for achieving 
well-being within four months. Almost worth coughing up the £20 – were 
it not for my suspicion that the study – involving as it does studies 
over so many fields – is going to turn out to be full of holes. Anyway, 
that's my prediction.

More here:
"The researchers further draw on two striking pieces of independent 
evidence to illustrate their point - over the last 50 years developed 
countries have not seen any increases to national happiness in spite of 
huge economic gains. Mental health on the other hand appears to be 
deteriorating worldwide. The researchers argue that resources should be 
directed towards the things that have the best chance of improving the 
health and happiness of our nations - investment in mental health care 
by increasing the access and availability of psychological therapy 
could be a more effective way of improving national well-being than the 
pursuit of income growth."

http://tinyurl.com/yd956z8

Phew! So many questions come to mind! For starters, I'd like to see the 
evidence that "mental health appears [sic] to be deteriorating 
worldwide". Then I'd like to see the evidence for the remarkable 
efficacy of four months of "psychological therapy". Again, what about 
the cost of providing the resources, particularly the education and 
training of a massive number of new counsellors and psychotherapists to 
take on this huge task of replacing increased monetary reward by 
inaugurating what would effectively be a therapeutic society. And what 
psychological theories and techniques are going to be used – can you 
imagine how all the different strands of psychotherapy would be 
competing for the Government monies made available for the new policy – 
or should I call it this brave new world?

Seems to me like these are ivory-tower proposals emanating from Warwick 
University. Still, it keeps these academics off the streets. :-)

Allen Esterson
Former lecturer, Science Department
Southwark College, London
http://www.esterson.org



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