7 Proven Types of Therapy That Actually Work
📋 In This Guide
- Why Choosing the Right Type of Therapy Matters
- CBT — Cognitive Behavioral Therapy
- DBT — Dialectical Behavior Therapy
- EMDR — Eye Movement Desensitization & Reprocessing
- ACT — Acceptance and Commitment Therapy
- Psychodynamic Therapy
- Solution-Focused Brief Therapy
- Narrative Therapy
- Side-by-Side Comparison
- Find Your Best Therapy Match (Interactive)
- Frequently Asked Questions
Why Choosing the Right Type of Therapy Matters
Walking into therapy for the first time — or returning after years away — one of the first things that can stop you cold is the alphabet soup of approaches: CBT, DBT, EMDR, ACT, SFBT. What does any of it mean, and which one is right for you?
You’re not alone in that confusion. According to a 2023 Statista report, approximately 60 million Americans received mental health treatment in the past year, yet surveys consistently show that a significant portion of people who haven’t sought help cite “not knowing where to go” as the main barrier. Here in Wichita, that gap is real — and closeable.
The good news: research is clear that the type of therapy matters, but it doesn’t have to be perfect to work. A landmark review published in Psychological Medicine (2021) analyzed 494 systematic reviews encompassing over 221,000 participants and found that cognitive behavioral approaches consistently produce meaningful benefit across diverse mental and physical health conditions. But CBT is just one of many well-validated paths.
Research shows: A 2024 study published in JAMA Psychiatry found that outpatient psychotherapy use increased significantly in the U.S. between 2018 and 2021, particularly among adults aged 18–44. More people than ever are choosing therapy — the question has shifted from whether to seek help to which kind to seek.
This guide breaks down the 7 most widely used and evidence-backed types of therapy available at Resolutions Therapy in Wichita. For each approach, you’ll find what the research actually says, what conditions it’s best suited for, and what to expect in a session. We’ve also built an interactive matching tool below to help you find the best starting point for your situation.
One important note: most skilled therapists are trained in multiple modalities and will blend approaches based on your individual needs. The goal of this guide isn’t to lock you into a single box — it’s to demystify the options so you can walk into your first appointment with confidence.
The 7 Proven Types of Therapy Explained

1. CBT — Cognitive Behavioral Therapy
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy is the most extensively studied form of psychotherapy in the world. Developed by Dr. Aaron Beck in the 1960s, it’s built on a deceptively simple premise: how you think shapes how you feel, and how you feel shapes what you do. By identifying and reshaping distorted thought patterns — called cognitive distortions — CBT helps break the self-reinforcing cycles that fuel anxiety, depression, and other conditions.
In a typical CBT session, you and your therapist work collaboratively to identify specific triggering thoughts, examine the evidence for and against them, and practice alternative interpretations. Homework between sessions — thought journals, behavioral experiments — is common and contributes significantly to outcomes. CBT is typically structured and time-limited, often 12–20 sessions, making it practical for busy lives and widely covered by insurance.
Good news: CBT has among the lowest relapse rates of any psychological treatment. A long-term study tracking patients over 46 months found those who completed CBT maintained improvements significantly better than standard care alone.
2. DBT — Dialectical Behavior Therapy
Developed by Dr. Marsha Linehan in the early 1990s, DBT balances two opposing ideas: accepting yourself exactly as you are, while simultaneously working to change. This balance — radical acceptance and active change — is what makes DBT uniquely powerful for people who feel stuck in overwhelming emotional cycles.
Standard DBT has four components: individual therapy, skills training groups, phone coaching for crises, and a therapist consultation team. You’ll learn four core skill modules: Mindfulness, Distress Tolerance, Emotion Regulation, and Interpersonal Effectiveness. Beyond BPD, DBT has demonstrated efficacy for eating disorders, substance use, depression, and PTSD. Research from PMC (2018) notes DBT is currently the only empirically supported treatment specifically designed for borderline personality disorder.
Important: DBT requires significant commitment — standard treatment typically runs 6–12 months. However, a 2022 randomized trial in Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics found 6-month DBT was non-inferior to 12-month DBT for most patients, suggesting shorter courses work for many people.
3. EMDR — Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing
Developed by Dr. Francine Shapiro in 1989, EMDR uses bilateral sensory stimulation (guided eye movements, tapping, or alternating sounds) while a person briefly focuses on a distressing memory. The goal: help the brain do what it couldn’t do on its own — fully process and integrate a traumatic experience so it loses its emotional charge. Unlike talk therapies, EMDR doesn’t require you to describe your trauma in detail.
EMDR follows a structured 8-phase protocol. Neuroimaging research shows EMDR reduces hyperactivity in the amygdala (the brain’s fear center) and normalizes hippocampal function — providing a biological basis for its effectiveness. At Resolutions Therapy, Shonda Moore, LSCSW, with over 23 years of trauma treatment experience, specializes in EMDR for Wichita-area clients navigating PTSD, childhood trauma, military trauma, and complex grief.
Research shows: A 2024 meta-analysis in PMC analyzing 25 controlled studies found EMDR produced significant reductions in depression symptoms — suggesting its reach extends well beyond its original trauma focus.
4. ACT — Acceptance and Commitment Therapy
ACT takes a counterintuitive stance: the goal isn’t to feel better — it’s to live better, even when you don’t feel good. Part of the “third wave” of cognitive behavioral therapies, ACT uses mindfulness strategies and values clarification to help people accept difficult thoughts and feelings rather than fighting them, and commit to behaviors aligned with their deepest values. The core concept — “psychological flexibility” — is the ability to stay present, hold thoughts lightly, and move toward what matters even in discomfort.
5. Psychodynamic Therapy
Psychodynamic therapy is the modern, evidence-based descendant of psychoanalytic traditions. Its core insight: many of our present-day struggles are shaped by past experiences, attachment patterns, and unconscious processes — and understanding them can free us from their grip. Sessions are more open-ended than CBT, with an emphasis on the therapeutic relationship itself as a vehicle for change. Therapists may explore recurring relationship patterns, defensive styles, and the meanings attached to life events.
6. Solution-Focused Brief Therapy (SFBT)
SFBT flips the traditional therapy script. Instead of dwelling on problems and their origins, SFBT focuses almost entirely on solutions, strengths, and the future. The classic SFBT question — “Suppose a miracle happened tonight while you slept and your problem was solved. What would be different when you woke up?” — is a carefully designed tool for bypassing rumination and activating the client’s own vision of change. Developed in the 1980s at the Brief Family Therapy Center, SFBT typically runs 3 to 8 sessions.
7. Narrative Therapy
Narrative Therapy starts from a powerful premise: you are not your problem — your problem is your problem. Developed by Michael White and David Epston in the 1980s, it helps people examine the stories they’ve built about themselves and their lives, then separate from the problem-saturated narratives that have taken hold. By “externalizing” the problem, clients gain distance, perspective, and agency. This is especially valuable for people who have internalized shame-based identities: “I’m broken,” “I’m just an anxious person.”

Side-by-Side Comparison of All 7 Types of Therapy
Not sure where to start? This comparison table summarizes the key features of each approach to help you quickly identify which types of therapy might be worth exploring with your Resolutions Therapy clinician.
| Therapy | Primary Focus | Typical Length | Session Style | Best Known For |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CBT | Thoughts → Feelings → Behavior | 12–20 sessions | Structured, skill-based | Anxiety, depression, OCD |
| DBT | Emotion regulation + acceptance | 6–12 months | Individual + group | BPD, self-harm, intense emotions |
| EMDR | Trauma memory reprocessing | 8–16 sessions | Protocol-based, less verbal | PTSD, trauma, complex grief |
| ACT | Values + psychological flexibility | 8–16 sessions | Mindfulness + experiential | Chronic pain, anxiety, transitions |
| Psychodynamic | Past patterns + insight | 16–24+ sessions | Open-ended, exploratory | Relationship patterns, depression |
| SFBT | Solutions + strengths | 3–8 sessions | Brief, directive, future-focused | Life transitions, family issues |
| Narrative | Story + identity | 8–20 sessions | Collaborative, exploratory | Shame, cultural identity, trauma |
Good news: At Resolutions Therapy, our clinicians are trained across multiple modalities. Most treatment plans blend approaches — for example, CBT skills combined with EMDR trauma processing, or DBT with narrative work. Your therapist tailors the approach to you, not the other way around.
🧠 Find Your Best Therapy Match
Answer 5 quick questions and we’ll suggest the therapy approach most likely to help your situation. Remember — this is a starting point, not a diagnosis. Your Resolutions Therapy clinician will personalize your plan.
Frequently Asked Questions About Types of Therapy
How do I know which type of therapy is right for me?
The honest answer is that you rarely know for certain before you start — and that's okay. Research consistently shows that the therapeutic relationship (the trust and connection between you and your therapist) is often a stronger predictor of outcomes than the specific modality used. That said, certain approaches have stronger evidence for specific conditions: EMDR for trauma and PTSD, DBT for emotional dysregulation and borderline personality disorder, CBT for anxiety and depression.
The most practical approach: schedule an initial assessment with one of our Wichita clinicians at Resolutions Therapy. During that first session, your therapist will ask about your goals, history, and preferences and recommend a direction. Don't hesitate to ask directly: "Why are you recommending this approach for me?" A good therapist will always explain their clinical reasoning. You can also use the interactive quiz above as a conversation starter.
How long does CBT take to work?
CBT is one of the most time-efficient forms of psychotherapy. Most structured CBT protocols run 12–20 weekly sessions, and many people notice measurable improvement within the first 6–8 sessions. A 2023 meta-analysis in ScienceDirect found post-treatment effect sizes for CBT in depression were medium to large (Hedges' g: 0.51–0.81), with gains holding at follow-up.
That said, CBT isn't a quick fix — the work happens largely between sessions through homework, journaling, and behavioral experiments. People who engage with between-session practice consistently tend to see results faster. It's worth noting that CBT has one of the lowest relapse rates among psychological treatments — the skills you learn are yours to keep long after therapy ends.
Does EMDR really work, or is it just pseudoscience?
EMDR is one of the most scrutinized therapies in mental health research — and the evidence has held up. It has earned first-line treatment recommendations from the World Health Organization (WHO), the American Psychological Association (APA), the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA/DoD), and the International Society for Traumatic Stress Studies (ISTSS). These endorsements require a robust, replicated evidence base from multiple independent research groups.
There is ongoing scientific debate about why EMDR works — specifically whether the bilateral eye movements themselves are essential, or whether it's primarily the exposure and cognitive components. Either way, the outcomes are not in serious dispute: studies consistently show EMDR reduces PTSD symptoms significantly and efficiently. Neuroimaging research has shown measurable changes in amygdala activity and hippocampal function following EMDR, providing a biological basis for the clinical outcomes observed.
Is DBT only for borderline personality disorder?
No — while DBT was originally developed for BPD, its core skills are broadly applicable. Research compiled by the Linehan Institute shows DBT has demonstrated efficacy for eating disorders (especially binge eating and bulimia), substance use disorders, treatment-resistant depression, bipolar disorder, PTSD, and behavioral problems in adolescents.
The thread connecting these conditions: they all involve difficulty regulating emotions, and behaviors that function as attempts to manage those emotions. DBT's four skill modules directly address these patterns. Many clients at Resolutions Therapy who don't have a BPD diagnosis benefit significantly from DBT skills training — particularly those who describe themselves as "highly sensitive" or who struggle with impulsivity.
Does insurance cover these types of therapy in Wichita?
Generally yes. Most major insurance plans, including KanCare, Medicare, and private insurers, cover individual psychotherapy with a licensed mental health provider. Because CBT, DBT, EMDR, and the other approaches on this list are all evidence-based treatments, they are typically billable under standard therapy procedure codes.
The specifics depend on your individual plan — copay, deductible, and sessions per year will vary. At Resolutions Therapy, our staff can verify your insurance benefits before your first appointment so there are no surprises. For a full list of accepted plans, visit our Insurance Information page. If you're uninsured or underinsured, ask about sliding scale options when you call.
Can I switch types of therapy if my first approach isn't working?
Absolutely — and this is more common than most people realize. The initial approach your therapist recommends is always a hypothesis, not a final verdict. If after 6–8 sessions you're not noticing any meaningful movement, that's important information worth discussing openly with your therapist.
In many cases, what looks like the "wrong approach" is a signal to adjust the focus. For example, if CBT isn't making a dent in depression, there may be underlying trauma that warrants EMDR before the cognitive work can take hold. At Resolutions Therapy, our Wichita clinicians are trained across multiple modalities so adjustments don't require starting over with a new provider.
What does "evidence-based therapy" actually mean?
An evidence-based therapy is one that has been tested in rigorous, controlled clinical research — typically randomized controlled trials (RCTs) — and found to produce consistent, meaningful improvement compared to no treatment or standard care. The strongest evidence comes from multiple independent studies across different populations, settings, and research teams.
All 7 types of therapy described in this guide are classified as evidence-based by major professional bodies including the American Psychological Association (APA) and the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH). All Resolutions Therapy clinicians practice within evidence-based frameworks and can explain the research behind their recommendations.

Finding the Right Type of Therapy in Wichita
Understanding the types of therapy available is the first step — but information alone doesn't create change. If something in this guide resonated with you, that resonance is worth listening to.
The research is unambiguous: therapy works. A 2021 Cambridge University meta-review spanning 494 systematic reviews and more than 221,000 participants confirmed that evidence-based therapies produce consistent, clinically meaningful improvement across conditions, populations, and settings. The challenge for most people isn't the lack of effective treatments. It's taking the step to begin.
Research shows: Searches for "therapists near me" increased 49% between 2020 and 2023 nationally — and 90% of people who have been to therapy believe more Americans should go. Mental health support isn't a luxury. It's a resource.
At Resolutions Therapy in Wichita, our licensed team — including LPCs, LMSWs, LCSWs, and LCMFTs — are trained across all the modalities described in this guide. Whether you're dealing with trauma, relationship difficulties, anxiety, depression, emotional dysregulation, or a life transition you can't navigate alone, we have a clinician and an approach matched to your needs.
Your first appointment is a conversation, not a commitment to a specific path. We'll listen, assess, and build a treatment plan together — one that makes sense for you, your schedule, and your goals. You don't have to know exactly which type of therapy you need before you call. That's what we're here for.
Ready to Find Your Best Therapy Match?
Our Wichita therapists are accepting new clients. Most insurance plans accepted, including KanCare and Medicare.
References & Sources
- Fordham, B. et al. (2021). "The evidence for CBT in any condition, population or context: A meta-review." Psychological Medicine. PMC3584580
- Cuijpers, P. et al. (2023). "CBT vs. control conditions, other psychotherapies and pharmacotherapies for depression." PMC. PMC9840507
- ScienceDirect. (2024). "CBTs for depression: RCTs 2019–2023." ScienceDirect.
- Batista, S. et al. (2024). "Efficacy of DBT for BPD: Systematic review of RCTs." PMC. PMC10896753
- Rizvi, S. et al. (2018). "Dialectical behavior therapy as treatment for borderline personality disorder." PMC. PMC6007584
- McMain, S. et al. (2022). "Effectiveness of 6 vs. 12 months of DBT for BPD." Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics, 91(6). Karger.
- EMDR International Association. (2025). "Recent Research on EMDR Therapy." EMDRIA.org
- Simpson, A. et al. (2025). "Clinical and cost-effectiveness of EMDR for PTSD in adults." British Journal of Psychology. Wiley.
- PMC. (2024). "Efficacy of EMDR in depression: Meta-analysis." PMC11433385
- Olfson, M. et al. (2024). "Trends in outpatient psychotherapy among US adults." JAMA Psychiatry. PMC11618581
- Statista. (2024). "Mental health treatment or therapy among U.S. adults." Statista.com.
- SAMHSA. (2024). Solution-Focused Brief Therapy as evidence-based practice. SAMHSA.gov
