Who stays, who benefits?:Predicting dropout and change in cognitive behaviour therapy for psychosis
- Link:
- Autor/in:
- Erscheinungsjahr:
- 2014
- Medientyp:
- Text
- Schlagworte:
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- Adult
- Cognitive Therapy
- Comorbidity
- Female
- Forecasting
- Humans
- Male
- Middle Aged
- Patient Compliance
- Patient Dropouts
- Psychotic Disorders
- Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic
- Social Adjustment
- Treatment Outcome
- Waiting Lists
- Young Adult
- Beschreibung:
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This study investigates the predictors of outcome in a secondary analysis of dropout and completer data from a randomized controlled effectiveness trial comparing CBTp to a wait-list group (Lincoln et al., 2012). Eighty patients with DSM-IV psychotic disorders seeking outpatient treatment were included. Predictors were assessed at baseline. Symptom outcome was assessed at post-treatment and at 1-year follow-up. The predictor×group interactions indicate that a longer duration of disorder predicted less improvement in negative symptoms in the CBTp but not in the wait-list group whereas jumping-to-conclusions was associated with poorer outcome only in the wait-list group. There were no CBTp specific predictors of improvement in positive symptoms. However, in the combined sample (immediate CBTp+the delayed CBTp group) baseline variables predicted significant amounts of positive and negative symptom variance at post-therapy and 1-year follow-up after controlling for pre-treatment symptoms. Lack of insight and low social functioning were the main predictors of drop-out, contributing to a prediction accuracy of 87%. The findings indicate that higher baseline symptom severity, poorer functioning, neurocognitive deficits, reasoning biases and comorbidity pose no barrier to improvement during CBTp. However, in line with previous predictor-research, the findings imply that patients need to receive treatment earlier.
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- Lizenz:
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- info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess
- Quellsystem:
- Forschungsinformationssystem der UHH
Interne Metadaten
- Quelldatensatz
- oai:www.edit.fis.uni-hamburg.de:publications/9c9dc004-424b-462b-a7e5-847c298a778b