About the Journal

Mission: Pragmatic Case Studies in Psychotherapy (PCSP) is devoted to advancing knowledge of clinical process of psychotherapy, clinical outcome, and clinical training/research through the innovative use of carefully crafted and peer reviewed clinical case studies.

Published By: PCSP is published by the National Register of Health Service Psychologists, located in Washington, DC, USA.  It began publication in 2005 under the Rutgers University Libraries System publishing program. It moved to the National Register in 2022.

Open Access Policy: Articles published in PCSP are published as "open access" material. PCSP articles are published under a Creative Commons Attribution Noncommerical Share Alike 3.0 United States License.

Privacy Statement: The names and email addresses entered in this journal site will be used exclusively for the stated purposes of this journal and the National Register organization. The data collected from registered and non-registered users of this journal falls within the scope of the standard functioning of peer-reviewed journals. It includes information that makes communication possible for the editorial process; it is used to informs readers about the authorship and editing of content; it enables collecting aggregated data on readership behaviors.Data that will assist in developing this publishing platform may be shared with its developer Public Knowledge Project in an anonymized and aggregated form, with appropriate exceptions such as article metrics. The data will not be sold by this journal or PKP nor will it be used for purposes other than those stated here. The authors published in this journal are responsible for the human subject data that figures in the research reported here.Those involved in editing this journal seek to be compliant with industry standards for data privacy, including the European Union’s General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) provision for “data subject rights” that include (a) breach notification; (b) right of access; (c) the right to be forgotten; (d) data portability; and (e) privacy by design. The GDPR also allows for the recognition of “the public interest in the availability of the data,” which has a particular saliency for those involved in maintaining, with the greatest integrity possible, the public record of scholarly publishing.