| Literature DB >> 29520535 |
Tim Kaiser1, Lisa Schmutzhart2, Anton-Rupert Laireiter2.
Abstract
While monitoring systems in psychotherapy have become more common, little is known about the attitudes that mental health practitioners have towards these systems. In an online survey among 111 Austrian psychotherapists and trainees, attitudes towards therapy monitoring were measured. A well-validated questionnaire measuring attitudes towards outcome monitoring, the Outcome Measurement Questionnaire, was used. Clinicians' theoretical orientations as well as previous knowledge and experience with monitoring systems were associated with positive attitudes towards monitoring. Possible factors that may have led to these findings, like the views of different theoretical orientations or obstacles in Austrian public health care, are discussed.Entities:
Keywords: Monitoring attitude; Outcome Measurement Questionnaire; Outcome monitoring; Process monitoring; Validation
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29520535 PMCID: PMC6097747 DOI: 10.1007/s10488-018-0862-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adm Policy Ment Health ISSN: 0894-587X
Age and years of clinical experience of participants
| Participants | n | Mean age (years) | SD | Range (years) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total | 111 | 51.39 | 11.75 | 27–79 |
| Women | 71 | 48.92 | 10.15 | 28–67 |
| Men | 40 | 55.78 | 13.18 | 27–79 |
Clinical experience was not provided by two female participants
Fit measures of CFA models for the OMQ scale
| Model | df |
|
| CFI | TLI | RMSEA | SRMR |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| One factor | 230 | 535.93 | 2.33 | 0.946 | 0.941 | 0.110 | 0.084 |
| Willis et al. ( | 229 | 522.85 | 2.28 | 0.948 | 0.943 | 0.108 | 0.083 |
| Smits et al. ( | 229 | 498.42 | 2.17 | 0.953 | 0.948 | 0.103 | 0.079 |
| PMQ one factor | 20 | 41.08 | 2.05 | 0.970 | 0.957 | 0.098 | 0.055 |
First three models apply to the OMQ, fourth model applies to PMQ. Scaling-corrected Chi-squared, CFI, TLI and RMSEA are reported. The TLI of the Smits et al. (2015) model was < .95 after removing item 21
OMQ item means, standard deviations and approval rates. Items are sorted by approval rate
| Item | Content | Mean | SD | % Approval |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 17 | Useful to provide feedback based on monitoring | 4.261 | 0.970 | 87.39 |
| 4 | Would discuss results with customer | 4.486 | 1.285 | 81.08 |
| 11 | There is value in developing monitoring skills | 4.171 | 1.043 | 79.28 |
| 13 | Measures take too long | 4.018 | 1.221 | 66.67 |
| 20 | Customer accepts more responsibility | 3.883 | 1.118 | 66.67 |
| 3 | Help motivate customers | 3.874 | 1.192 | 63.96 |
| 8 | Engage customers more actively | 3.802 | 1.267 | 63.06 |
| 14 | Clients will not mind | 3.703 | 1.067 | 60.36 |
| 9 | Need to develop understanding data | 3.649 | 1.366 | 60.36 |
| 19 | Learn more about monitoring | 3.559 | 1.165 | 57.66 |
| 7 | Find monitoring very useful | 3.693 | 1.189 | 56.76 |
| 22 | Helps treatment planning | 3.532 | 1.256 | 55.86 |
| 12 | Better treatment decisions | 3.459 | 1.204 | 55.86 |
| 21 | Don’t know how to use measures | 3.676 | 1.287 | 54.05 |
| 23 | Nobody has time for monitoring | 3.550 | 1.227 | 53.15 |
| 16 | See value in changing clinical practice | 3.360 | 1.094 | 52.25 |
| 6 | More collaboration between clinician and consumer | 3.441 | 1.173 | 49.55 |
| 2 | Confident integrating monitoring into work | 3.261 | 1.298 | 47.75 |
| 18 | Intention to offer monitoring to consumers | 3.306 | 1.271 | 46.85 |
| 10 | Avoid usage of monitoring | 3.333 | 1.454 | 43.24 |
| 5 | Takes human aspect out of treatment | 3.306 | 1.278 | 43.24 |
| 1 | Does not capture what is happening for clients | 3.297 | 1.180 | 40.54 |
| 15 | Questions not relevant to client | 3.162 | 1.083 | 36.04 |
Items were abbreviated. See “Appendix 1: OMQ Items” for full item text. Scale values: 1: strongly disagree, 2: disagree, 3: slightly disagree, 4: slightly agree, 5: agree, 6: strongly agree. Approval rates were calculated by dividing the number of answers indicating approval of a statement by the total number of responses. Participants responding with 4 or higher for an item were considered “approval”. Margin of error for approval ratings: 9.25%
PMQ item means, standard deviations and approval ratings, i.e. percentage of participants repsonding with at least “slightly agree” to the statement
| Item | Content | Mean | SD | % Approval |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 8 | Interpretation too complex | 4.225 | 1.263 | 69.37 |
| 3 | Promotes self reflexion in clients | 3.649 | 1.101 | 64.86 |
| 6 | Processes not captured adequately by monitoring | 4.009 | 1.247 | 63.96 |
| 2 | Clients overcharged by monitoring | 3.973 | 1.194 | 63.96 |
| 4 | Unnecessary effort | 3.658 | 1.331 | 55.86 |
| 1 | Recognize possible deteriorations in course of treatment | 3.387 | 1.273 | 54.95 |
| 5 | More trust in therapeutic process | 3.297 | 1.180 | 46.85 |
| 7 | Could imagine using process monitoring | 2.820 | 1.237 | 31.53 |
Items are sorted by approval rating
Items were abbreviated. See “Appendix 2: PMQ Items” for full item text. Scale values: 1: strongly disagree, 2: disagree, 3: slightly disagree, 4: slightly agree, 5: agree, 6: strongly agree. Approval rates were calculated by dividing the number of answers indicating approval of a statement by the total number of responses. Participants responding with 4 or higher for an item were considered “approval”. Margin of error for approval ratings: 9.25%
Fig. 1Interaction effect of clinician gender and previous monitoring experience on attitude towards process monitoring. Error bars around means indicate 95% confidence intervals
OMQ and PMQ scores (mean and standard deviation) by clinician characteristics
| Characteristics | Participants | n | Mean OMQ (SD) | Mean PMQ (SD) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gender | Women | 71 | 3.57 (.71) | 3.11 (.88) |
| Men | 40 | 3.81 (.93) | 3.26 (1.09) | |
| Previous experience with monitoring | Yes | 26 | 3.95 (.91) | 3.54 (.95) |
| No | 85 | 3.57 (.75) | 3.05 (.94) | |
| Theoretical orientation | Humanist | 40 | 3.45 (.86) | 2.95 (1.01) |
| CBT | 27 | 3.97 (.73) | 3.36 (.93) | |
| Psychodynamic | 24 | 3.52 (.72) | 3.13 (.97) | |
| Systemic | 20 | 3.82 (.75) | 3.36 (.85) | |
| Total | 111 | 3.66 (0.80) | 3.16 (0.96) |
CBT cognitive-behavioral therapy. Scale values: 1: strongly disagree, 2: disagree, 3: slightly disagree, 4: slightly agree, 5: agree, 6: strongly agree
Therapist-identified advantages of monitoring systems and their absolute frequencies
| Category | Example | Frequency |
|---|---|---|
| Control and visibility of changes | Accompanies therapy well, demonstrates effects of treatment | 23 |
| Improved reflection | Increases self-reflection of patients | 11 |
| Improved feedback | Offers therapist information on experiences between sessions | 7 |
| Enhanced therapy motivation | Could motivate clients to proceed with therapy | 6 |
| Objectivity, comparability | Standardization | 5 |
| Increased autonomy for patients | Increases transparency, reduces iatrogenic pathologies | 4 |
| Supporting psychotherapy research | Makes sense for research purposes | 4 |
| Increased efficiency of treatment | Increases efficiency | 2 |
Therapist-identified disadvantages of monitoring systems and their absolute frequencies
| Category | Example | Frequency |
|---|---|---|
| Increased effort | Who is paying me for the additional work hours? | 32 |
| Negative influences on therapy | Could have negative influences on therapeutic relationship | 13 |
| Pressuring and overextending patients | Could pressure patients into providing positive results | 10 |
| Lack of validity | Disconnected from the patient’s reality | 9 |
| Deindividualization | Dehumanizing–individual is reduced to mere statistics | 8 |
| Financial efforts | Too expensive | 7 |
| Inappropriate for some patients | Additional stress for patients who tend to ruminate | 7 |
| Contradicting therapeutic style | Transference and countertransference can’t develop | 4 |
| Lack of patients’ motivation and compliance | Repetitive questionnaires getting on patient’s nerves | 3 |
| Lack of relevance of resulting data | Does not capture what is really happening in therapy | 3 |
| Problems with interpretation | Interpretation of data could be biased | 3 |
| Bureaucratization | Reduces therapist to a mere bureaucrat | 3 |
| Change of therapeutic focus | Fixation on monitoring of symptoms | 3 |
| Increased orientation towards efficiency | This implants the principle of efficiency into psychotherapy | 2 |
| Serves only reduction of treatment costs | Health insurances stop paying for therapy sessions because of early improvements | 2 |
Comparison of sample characteristics with the general population of Austrian psychotherapists
| Sample | Population in % | |
|---|---|---|
| N | 111 | 8429 |
| Gender—female (%) | 64.0 | 72.4 |
| Theoretical orientation | ||
| Psychodynamic/analytic (%) | 24 (21.6) | 2180 (25.9) |
| Humanistic (%) | 40 (36.4) | 3159 (37.5) |
| Cognitive-behavioral (%) | 27 (24.3) | 999 (11.9) |
| Systemic (%) | 20 (18.0) | 2091 (24.7) |
Population-level information taken from online database “Statistik und Daten zur Psychotherapie” (2017), including all registered psychotherapists listed with theoretical orientation