Post Three: Analysis of a Scholarly Source
In this article, written by Douglas Haldeman, it discusses how conversion therapy or treatments alike are still continuously used even though homosexuality was taken out of the DSM as a disorder. Interestingly this journal article touches on the side of the medical professional which provides an interesting view considering we usually focus on the participants. Haldeman focuses on two main facets of conversion therapy. The first concern is the discourse surrounding the ethics of the person giving the therapy. Essentially this is questioning how far a medical professional could carry out this treatment before going against the APA guidelines for what is deemed as unethical treatment. The second concern is regarding how credible the research on conversion therapy is that makes a claim that conversion therapy in fact does have the intended results.
While this article is useful in that it questions if society is the one to blame for these treatments happening at the rates that they do due to lack of acceptance , Which I can agree with, there are some other questions to expand this research. I would expect people to question how this work can be translated into bigger population meaning other identities than just the assumption that men and women in these treatments only identify as homosexual. If this research was being done by Haldeman today I would encourage the expansion to finding results regarding all different identities including gender and sexual ones.
reference: http://drdoughaldeman.com/doc/ScientificExamination.pdf












