| Literature DB >> 32306088 |
Paula Viefhaus1, Manfred Döpfner2,1, Lydia Dachs1, Hildegard Goletz1, Anja Görtz-Dorten1, Claudia Kinnen1, Daniela Perri1, Christiane Rademacher2, Stephanie Schürmann2, Katrin Woitecki1, Tanja Wolff Metternich-Kaizman2,1, Daniel Walter3,4.
Abstract
This observational study examined treatment satisfaction (TS) following routine outpatient cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) in a large sample of children (n = 795; aged 6 to 10 years). TS was investigated in parent and therapist rating. Means, standard deviations and inter-rater correlations were calculated to investigate TS. Regression analysis was conducted to examine potential correlates of TS (patient-related variables, mental disorder characteristics, socio-demographic factors and treatment variables). High TS in parent and therapist rating was found, with therapists showing a lower degree of TS than parents (completely or predominantly satisfied: parent rating 94.1%, therapist rating 69.5%). A statistically significant, moderate inter-rater correlation was found. Regression analysis explained 21.8% of the variance in parent rating and 57.2% in therapist rating. Most of the TS variance was explained by mental disorder characteristics (parent-rated symptoms and therapist-rated global impairment at treatment end) and by treatment variables (especially the therapist-rated cooperation of parents and patients), whereas socio-demographic and patient-related variables did not show any relevant associations with TS. Based on these results, to optimize TS, therapists should concentrate on establishing a sustainable cooperation of parents and children during therapy, and work to achieve a low global impairment at treatment end.Entities:
Keywords: Children; Cognitive-behavioral therapy; Differential effects; Routine treatment; Treatment satisfaction
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32306088 DOI: 10.1007/s00787-020-01528-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Child Adolesc Psychiatry ISSN: 1018-8827 Impact factor: 4.785