The Tapping Evidence Base
Multiple Conditions

Energy Psychology: Time for a Second Look

Kevin, R. Β· The North Carolina Psychologist Β· 2011

ReviewPreliminaryβœ“ Source-checkedπŸ“ United States
In plain English. This is a professional-newsletter essay arguing that energy psychology, despite having been formally banned by the American Psychological Association from counting toward continuing education credits, deserves reconsideration in light of accumulating research and the author's own clinical experience. It's an opinion and summary piece, not a study with its own data.

What they found

The article discusses energy psychology's unique history as a method banned by the APA Education Directorate from continuing-education credit status, and summarizes recent literature alongside the author's clinical experience.

How the study worked

Who took partcommentary on energy psychology's standing in the psychology profession
What they didThis is a review or commentary synthesizing existing work rather than reporting a new trial.

The full record

DesignReview
Populationcommentary on energy psychology's standing in the psychology profession
JournalThe North Carolina Psychologist
Year2011
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
MethodEFT / tapping
Publication typeReview or meta-analysis
Verificationβœ“ Confirmed against the primary source

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Cite this study

APA

Kevin, R. (2011). Energy Psychology: Time for a Second Look. The North Carolina Psychologist.

This record is part of the Tapping Evidence Base β€” an openly-sourced, fully-referenced directory of the research on EFT/tapping.

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THE TAPPING EVIDENCE BASE Multiple Conditions βœ“ Review WHAT THEY FOUND The article discusses energy psychology'sunique history as a method banned by the APAEducation Directorate from… Review Kevin Β· 2011 Β· evidence.thetappingsolution.com