Long-term effectiveness of CBT in routine outpatient care - a 5 to 20-year follow-up study
R. von Brachel, G. Hirschfeld, A. Berner, U. Willutzki, T. Teismann, J.C. Cwick, J. Velten, D. Schulte, J. Margraf, Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics 88 (2019) 225–235.
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Artikel
| Englisch
Autor*in
von Brachel, Ruth;
Hirschfeld, Gerrit
;
Berner, Arleta;
Willutzki, Ulrike;
Teismann, Tobias;
Cwick, Jan Christopher;
Velten, Julia;
Schulte, Dietmar;
Margraf, Jürgen


Abstract
Objective: Long-term follow-ups several years after receiving cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) are scarce and most of the existing literature describes follow-up data of randomized-controlled trials. Thus, very little is known about the long-term effects of CBT in routine care. Methods: We investigated psychological functioning in a sample of 263 former outpatients who had received CBT for a variety of mental disorders such as depression, anxiety-, eating- or somatoform disorders 8.06 (SD 5.08) years after treatment termination. All participants completed a diagnostic interview as well as the Brief-Symptom Inventory (BSI) and the Beck Depression Inventory (BDI). Effect sizes and response rates according to Jacobson and Truax [J Consult Clin Psychol 1991;59:12–9] were calculated from pre- to posttreatment and from pretreatment to follow-up assessment. Results: Pre- to posttreatment effect sizes ranged between 0.75 (BDI) and 0.63 (BSI) and pretreatment to follow-up effect sizes were 0.92 (BDI) and 0.75 (BSI). Of all patients, 29% (BDI) and 17% (BSI) experienced clinically significant change at posttreatment and 42% (BDI) and 24% (BSI) at follow-up. Conclusion: The results point to the long-term effectiveness of CBT under routine conditions for a wide array of problems, especially when compared to the long-term effects of medical treatment. It is noteworthy that the results at follow-up were even better than at posttreatment, indicating further improvement. However, about a quarter of the patients did not respond sufficiently to therapy, neither concerning short-term nor long-term effects.
Erscheinungsjahr
Zeitschriftentitel
Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics
Band
88
Zeitschriftennummer
4
Seite
225–235
ISSN
eISSN
FH-PUB-ID
Zitieren
von Brachel, Ruth ; Hirschfeld, Gerrit ; Berner, Arleta ; Willutzki, Ulrike ; Teismann, Tobias ; Cwick, Jan Christopher ; Velten, Julia ; Schulte, Dietmar ; u. a.: Long-term effectiveness of CBT in routine outpatient care - a 5 to 20-year follow-up study. In: Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics Bd. 88, Karger (2019), Nr. 4, S. 225–235
von Brachel R, Hirschfeld G, Berner A, et al. Long-term effectiveness of CBT in routine outpatient care - a 5 to 20-year follow-up study. Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics. 2019;88(4):225–235. doi:10.1159/000500188
von Brachel, R., Hirschfeld, G., Berner, A., Willutzki, U., Teismann, T., Cwick, J. C., … Margraf, J. (2019). Long-term effectiveness of CBT in routine outpatient care - a 5 to 20-year follow-up study. Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics, 88(4), 225–235. https://doi.org/10.1159/000500188
@article{von Brachel_Hirschfeld_Berner_Willutzki_Teismann_Cwick_Velten_Schulte_Margraf_2019, title={Long-term effectiveness of CBT in routine outpatient care - a 5 to 20-year follow-up study}, volume={88}, DOI={10.1159/000500188}, number={4}, journal={Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics}, publisher={Karger}, author={von Brachel, Ruth and Hirschfeld, Gerrit and Berner, Arleta and Willutzki, Ulrike and Teismann, Tobias and Cwick, Jan Christopher and Velten, Julia and Schulte, Dietmar and Margraf, Jürgen}, year={2019}, pages={225–235} }
Brachel, Ruth von, Gerrit Hirschfeld, Arleta Berner, Ulrike Willutzki, Tobias Teismann, Jan Christopher Cwick, Julia Velten, Dietmar Schulte, and Jürgen Margraf. “Long-Term Effectiveness of CBT in Routine Outpatient Care - a 5 to 20-Year Follow-up Study.” Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics 88, no. 4 (2019): 225–235. https://doi.org/10.1159/000500188.
R. von Brachel et al., “Long-term effectiveness of CBT in routine outpatient care - a 5 to 20-year follow-up study,” Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics, vol. 88, no. 4, pp. 225–235, 2019.
von Brachel, Ruth, et al. “Long-Term Effectiveness of CBT in Routine Outpatient Care - a 5 to 20-Year Follow-up Study.” Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics, vol. 88, no. 4, Karger, 2019, pp. 225–235, doi:10.1159/000500188.