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Research on Social Work Practice, Vol. 17, No. 3, 392-407 (2007)
DOI: 10.1177/1049731506292530

Thought Field Therapy

A Former Insider's Experience

Monica Pignotti

Florida State University, Tallahassee, pignotti{at}worldnet.att.net

Thought Field Therapy (TFT) is a novel therapy that employs finger tapping on purported acupressure points. Over the past decade, TFT, promoted on the Internet and through testimonials of fast cures, has gained popularity with therapists, including clinical social workers. Although TFT claims to cure a wide variety of psychological and physical problems, there is scant evidence to support such claims. The following is an account of my 7-year experience as a leading practitioner, author, and teacher of TFT and includes my initial skepticism, what first interested me, my experiences training to the highest level of TFT (the proprietary Voice Technology) and becoming part of the inner circle of TFT, an experiment I did with Voice Technology, and factors that led to my doubts and ultimate disillusionment with TFT. The pseudoscientific aspects of TFT and how they can impair critical thinking are also discussed.

Key Words: Thought Field Therapy • novel therapies • pseudoscience • critical thinking • evidence-based practice • mental health • anxiety disorders


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M. Pignotti
Retraction of Earlier Article and Letter to Editor on Thought Field Therapy
Traumatology, March 1, 2008; 14(1): 151 - 151.
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