PrepTest 123, Section 3, Question 15

By Brandon Beaver | Published October 29, 2024

Type: Weaken

Difficulty:

Explanations

Don’t let the numbers confuse you on this one.
The argument boils down to: longer treatment is more effective than shorter treatment because the percentage of people who respond positively to the survey increases as treatment length increases.
That’s a subtle correlation-causation flaw.
The author’s saying longer treatment creates more positive patient feedback, so longer treatment must be more effective. But it’s just as likely that the patients who feel good about their therapy decide to stick with it for longer.
We have to weaken the argument, so we need to make it less likely that longer treatment is more effective.
A
This doesn’t impact the conclusion. We don’t know what proportion of the less-than-six-months group responded this way on the survey.
B
Nope. Survey response rate tells us nothing about treatment effectiveness.
C
Yes, this is it. This reverses causality—instead of longer treatment leading to better patient outcomes, the patients’ positive responses to therapy led to them continuing therapy.
D
But this would apply to both short- and long-term patients, so it tells us nothing about treatment length and effectiveness.
E
This is probably true, but it doesn’t influence patient outcomes—we have no clue whether people follow their doctor’s advice.

Passage

A consumer magazine surveyed people who had sought a psychologist's help with a personal problem. Of those responding who had received treatment for 6 months or less, 20 percent claimed that treatment "made things a lot better." Of those responding who had received longer treatment, 36 percent claimed that treatment "made things a lot better." Therefore, psychological treatment lasting more than 6 months is more effective than shorter-term treatment.

Question 15

Which one of the following, if true, most seriously weakens the argument?
Of the respondents who had received treatment for longer than 6 months, 10 percent said that treatment made things worse.
Patients who had received treatment for longer than 6 months were more likely to respond to the survey than were those who had received treatment for a shorter time.
Patients who feel they are doing well in treatment tend to remain in treatment, while those who are doing poorly tend to quit earlier.
Patients who were dissatisfied with their treatment were more likely to feel a need to express their feelings about it and thus to return the survey.
Many psychologists encourage their patients to receive treatment for longer than 6 months.