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Guest: Dr Scott Miller 📚 Book mentioned: Better Results: Using Deliberate Practice to Improve Therapeutic Effectiveness Get Your Copy @ https://a.co/d/0dXU6gql Connect with Dr Scott Miller: https://www.scottdmiller.com/index.html Facebook: / scott.miller.295977 In this episode of Private Practice Practically, I sit down with Dr. Scott D. Miller—psychologist, researcher, and pioneer of Feedback-Informed Treatment—to discuss a difficult question: Why haven’t therapy outcomes improved over the last several decades? We explore the research behind therapist effectiveness, the myth that experience automatically makes clinicians better, and why confidence may actually interfere with growth. Dr. Miller breaks down the concept of deliberate practice, how “super shrinks” develop excellence, and why routine outcome measurement may be the missing piece in therapist development. If you’re a graduate student, early-career clinician, supervisor, or seasoned therapist who wants to improve your outcomes—not just your confidence—this conversation is essential. Topics Covered: • Why therapy models don’t outperform each other • The “Lake Wobegon” effect in clinicians • Why CEUs may not improve effectiveness • Feedback-informed treatment (FIT) • Deliberate practice for therapists • Why time and experience don’t guarantee growth