“…Hypnosis facilitates recall of false as well as accurate material (Cardeña, Maldonado, van der Hart, & Speigel, 2000), and, as noted above, guided imagery increases the incidence of memory confabulation in certain contexts and for certain individuals (e.g., Paddock et al, 1999). In the past decade researchers have underlined the implications of these findings for clinical practice, and a professional consensus is now emerging that therapists (a) should educate clients about the fallibility of memory; (b) should not endorse the accuracy of uncorroborated trauma memories; (c) should not suggest to clients, subtly or overtly, that they have unrecovered memories; (d) should allow clients, as a general rule, to take the lead in presenting memories; and (e) should use special techniques such as hypnosis and guided imagery for memory retrieval or enhancement cautiously and nondirectively, if at all (Alpert et al, 1998;Briere, 1996;Courtois, 1999;Enns et al, 1998; International Society for the Study of Dissociation, 1997; Knapp & VandeCreek, 1997;Pope & Brown, 1996).…”