| Literature DB >> 24467336 |
Hilde De Saeger1, Jan H Kamphuis2, Stephen E Finn3, Justin D Smith4, Roel Verheul2, Jan J van Busschbach1, Dine J Feenstra1, Eva K Horn1.
Abstract
The field of clinical personality assessment is lacking in published empirical evidence regarding its treatment and clinical utility. This article reports on a randomized controlled clinical trial (N = 74) allocating patients awaiting treatment in a specialized clinic for personality disorders to either 4 sessions of (a) therapeutic assessment (TA) or (b) a structured goal-focused pretreatment intervention (GFPTI). In terms of short-term outcome, TA demonstrated superior ability to raise outcome expectancies and patient perceptions of progress toward treatment (Cohen's d = 0.65 and 0.56, respectively) and yielded higher satisfaction (d = 0.68). Moreover, patients reported marginally stronger alliance to the TA clinicians than to GFPT clinicians (d = 0.46), even though therapists perceived the alliance as equally positive in both groups. No differences in symptomatic ratings were observed. Results are discussed with reference to treatment utility in this particular patient group.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24467336 DOI: 10.1037/a0035667
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Psychol Assess ISSN: 1040-3590