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Gloster et al., 2023

APA Citation

Gloster, A. T., Haller, E., Villanueva. J., Block, V., Benoy, C., Meyer, A. H., Brogli, S., Kuhweide, V., Karekla, M., Bader, K., Walter, M. & Lang, U. (2023). Psychotherapy for Chronic In- and Outpatients with Common Mental Disorders: The “Choose Change” Effectiveness Trial. Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics, 1-9. doi: 10.1159/000529411

Publication Topic
ACT: Empirical
Publication Type
Article
Language
English
Keyword(s)
Anxiety and depression; Effectiveness; Routine care; Transdiagnostic; Treatment non-response
Abstract

Introduction: Treatment non-response occurs regularly, but psychotherapy is seldom examined for such patients. Existing studies targeted single diagnoses, were relatively small, and paid little attention to treatment under real-world conditions.

Objective: The Choose Change trial tested whether psychotherapy was effective in treating chronic patients with treatment non-response in a transdiagnostic sample of common mental disorders across two variants of treatment delivery (inpatient and outpatient).

Methods: The controlled nonrandomized effectiveness trial was conducted between May 2016 and May 2021. The study took place in two psychiatric clinics with N = 200 patients (n = 108 inpatients and n = 92 outpatients). Treatment variants were integrated inpatient care versus outpatient care based on acceptance and commitment therapy (ACT) for approximately 12 weeks. Therapists delivered individualized and non-manualized ACT. Main outcome measures were symptoms (Brief Symptom Checklist [BSCL]); well-being (Mental Health Continuum-Short Form [MHC-SF]), and functioning (WHO Disability Assessment Schedule [WHO-DAS]).

Results: Both inpatients and outpatients showed decreases in symptomatology (i.e., BSCL: d = 0.68) and increases in well-being and functioning (MHC-SF: d = 0.60 and WHO-DAS: d = 0.70), with more improvement in the inpatients during treatment. Both groups maintained gains 1 year following treatment, and the groups did not significantly differ from each other at this timepoint. Psychological flexibility moderated impact of stress on outcomes.

Conclusions: Psychotherapy as practiced under routine conditions is effective for a sample of patients with common mental disorders, a long history of treatment experience and burden of disease, in both inpatient and outpatient settings.

Trial registration: This study was registered in the ISRCTN registry on May 20, 2016, with the registration number ISRCTN11209732.