| Literature DB >> 30479822 |
Melissa De Smet1,2, Reitske Meganck1.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: The complex phenomenon of psychotherapy outcome requires further conceptual and methodological developments that facilitate clinically meaningful research findings. In this study, we rely on an idiosyncratic and process-oriented understanding of treatment effects in order to investigate long-term outcome. A conceptual model of long-term outcome is presented that comprises both a taxonomy of change and explanatory factors.Entities:
Keywords: inpatient psychotherapy; mixed methods research; naturalistic research; patient perspective; psychotherapy outcome
Year: 2018 PMID: 30479822 PMCID: PMC6196577 DOI: 10.5334/pb.432
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Psychol Belg ISSN: 0033-2879
Treatment history of research sample.
| Treatment history | Before inpatient treatment | After inpatient treatment | At five-year follow-up |
|---|---|---|---|
| Participants | n | n | n |
| Outpatient psychotherapy | 17 | 13 | 8 |
| Psychiatrist | 18 | 9 | 10 |
| Medication | 16 | 6 | 7 |
| Psychiatric hospitalization | 7 | 4 | |
Note. n = 22; various treatments per patient. Outpatient psychotherapy: often long-term, many different therapists and forms of talking-therapy or alternative treatments were consulted before inpatient treatment; creative therapy was increasingly consulted after inpatient treatment. Medication (in order of occurrence): antidepressants, sleep medication, anxiolytic, antipsychotic. Psychiatrist: if not specified, psychiatrist provided counselling.
The average, variation and meaning of outcome scores measured with the OQ-45 (total scores).
| Average total score (OQ-45) | Research sample | Clinical population | Normal population | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| M | SD (range) | Meaning | Percentile | Meaning | Percentile | |
| 97 | 16.5 (60–144) | High | 80–95 | Very high | 95–100 | |
| 67 | 22.2 (36–115) | Below average | 20–40 | High | 80–95 | |
| 73 | 22.7 (24–124) | Average (men) | 40–60 | Very high | 95–100 | |
| 76.7 | 19.6 (30–116) | Average | 40–60 | Very high | 95–100 | |
Note. Research sample: n varies across measuring points. Clinical population: 628 men and 896 women; Normal population: 296 men and 511 women (de Jong et al., 2008).
Clinical significance of outcome scores measured with the OQ-45 (total scores).
| OQ-45 total score | Start therapy | End therapy | One-year FU | Five-year FU |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| n | n | n | n | |
| Participants | 43 | 27 | 29 | 22 |
| Functional | 0 | 9 | 6 | 3 |
| Clinical range | 43 | 18 | 23 | 19 |
| Change from start treatment | ||||
| CS | 9 | 6 | 3 | |
| RC | 12 | 15 | 11 | |
| No RC | 5 | 5 | 6 | |
| Deterioration | 1 | 3 | 2 | |
Note. n varies due to the varying response rate at each measurement.
Functional distribution: below clinical cut-off; clinical range: above the clinical cut-off; CS: reliable change and crossing the clinical cut-off; RC: reliable change only; No RC: criteria of statistical reliable change not met; Deterioration: reliable deterioration (reliable change in negative direction). The cut-off between clinical and non-clinical population for the OQ-45 = 55; reliable change on the OQ-45: difference in scores ≥ 14.
Figure 1Conceptual model of long-term outcome comprising the taxonomy of experienced changes (I–V) and explanatory factors (A–D).
Taxonomy of the experienced changes.
| Core and subcategories |
|---|
i. A feeling of belonging ii. A new perspective i. Insight into self and difficulties ii. Alternative ways of expressing emotions and thoughts i. A mollified self ii. An empowered self i. Concrete changes in dealing with or handling things in life ii. Life-altering changes i. Recovery as on-going and fluctuating process ii. Resignation versus disappointment |
Examples of different positions in treatment.
| Position in treatment | Example excerpt |
|---|---|
| ‘It was hard when the initiative had to come from me. Maybe it’s my personality; I often need a lead, as I often tend to lean on others. And maybe it was the plan of the therapists that I would take initiative and stand up for myself. But having to create things myself in therapy was hard.’ | |
| ‘Being here [in the inpatient therapy centre] was a unique opportunity I had to grasp with my both hands. I chose for myself, I wanted to become a happier person, so I engaged in everything they offered me. At a certain point, I even asked for an extra form of therapy.’ | |
| ‘I had prepared myself for [the inpatient] treatment. I had made drawings with all my characteristics on it, I wanted to know all of it, I did not want to do nothing there [in the inpatient therapy centre]; I wanted to work on myself.’ | |
| ‘I’ve realized, I’m not very good at therapy… Personal conversations with people I don’t know so well are hard, it takes a while before I trust a person. I’m very secretive. I constantly censor myself and consider ‘what can I share and what not’ and “shouldn’t I be solving this on my own”.’ | |