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Browsing by Subject "psychotherapy"

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  • Lindgren, Anette (2019)
    Irritable bowel syndrome is a chronic common gastrointestinal disorder. There are three main factors which can be linked with the syndrome, genetical vulnerability, psychological burden and behavioural factors. Several studies have demonstrated the efficacy of psychosocial treatments for irritable bowel syndrome. The objective of psychosocial treatments is to strengthen coping-skills, behavioural functioning and improve quality of life in individuals with irritable bowel syndrome. This study focuses on the efficacy and mechanisms of psychosocial treatments. 4 The data was collected via online databases. Selected studies evaluated effectiveness of psychotherapy, mindfulness and online based therapeutic support groups for stress-reduction and emotion regulation. Effectiveness was measures by quality of life and symptom questionnaires and interviews. Results were also assessed after two to six months follow-up periods. Results showed improvement in quality of life and reduction on symptoms. In most of the studies effect sizes were medium or large (d > 0.47). Improvements were maintained until the follow-up periods. In societal perspective prominent result was that group interventions and online based psychotherapies provided improvements in symptoms and quality of life. This study identifies common mechanisms between various treatments. Affecting mechanisms were associated with psychological distress, behaviour and thoughts towards the syndrome. These findings suggest that treatments including stress reduction, self-monitoring and acceptance of syndrome may provide benefit in irritable bowel syndrome.
  • Närvänen, Eija (2019)
    Objective. Transdiagnostic models of psychopathology assume that the commonalities across disorders may outweigh their differences. While these models acknowledge that disorder-specific symptoms and features undoubtedly exist, the same underlying factors are perceived to cause and maintain various disorders. In recent years, this approach has received growing attention and several new forms of therapy have been developed based on it. These may be well-suited for the treatment of mixed-diagnosis groups or individuals with comorbid disorders, and as such, they hold the promise of being very cost-effective. One of the most established transdiagnostic treatments is the Unified Protocol (UP), designed to help patients suffering from depression and the full range of anxiety disorders. The purpose of the present study is to review the evidence regarding the efficacy and effectiveness of the UP for the transdiagnostic treatment of adult anxiety and depression. Methods. For this review, systematic literature searches were performed using the PsychInfo and PubMed online databases in October 2018. The search term used was “Unified Protocol”. The search yielded 114 results in PsychInfo and 138 in PubMed. Ten of these matched the following study selection criteria and were included in the current review: a) the study measured either the efficacy or effectiveness of the cognitive-behavioral UP therapy developed by Barlow (2011), b) treatment was delivered face-to-face in either individual or group setting, c) treatment followed the UP therapist guide without major modifications, d) participants suffered from an anxiety disorder or depression, e) participants were over 18 years of age, d) the study was published in 2015 or later, and f) the study was published in English in a peer-reviewed journal. Results and conclusions. The UP appeared both efficacious and efficient in reducing the severity of adult anxiety and depression as well as the number of comorbid diagnoses; however, there were some conflicting findings regarding recovery rates and effect sizes. The results achieved were comparable to those achieved using diagnosis-specific cognitive-behavioral therapy. The UP treatment had a positive impact on the patients’ functioning and quality of life and the amount of positive and negative affect they experienced. Treatment retention was generally high, particularly when treatment was delivered individually, and the UP received high ratings from those who participated in the studies. All in all, the current empiric evidence regarding the UP appears fairly promising. However, these results must be interpreted with caution, as the research concerning the UP is still in its infancy and a large part of it has been conducted by researchers affiliated with the treatment.
  • Grandell, Leena (2018)
    Objectives. Psychotherapy research has traditionally concentrated on the positive outcome of therapy whereas negative outcome has not been an object of interest. A comparison to psychopharmacological treatment, for which reporting of side-effects is mandatory, reveals a difference. The area of psychotherapy outcome has lacked consensus on theoretical, methodological and practical issues. This bachelor thesis is a literature review on the subject. The review is limited to cover research projects dealing with adult individual psychotherapy for mood and anxiety disorders concentrating on cognitive and psychodynamic therapy orientations. Method. The Bachelor thesis consisted of a literature review covering international scientific papers on negative outcome of psychotherapy concentrating on following research questions: operationalisation of psychotherapy outcome, measures for monitoring outcome, categorisation of psychotherapy outcome and methods for distinction between the categories. Additionally the work covered a review on quantitative results. Results and conclusions. No consensus on measuring psychotherapy outcome and the categorisation of outcome was evident. A typical approach was using the categories “recovered”, “improved”, “non-response” and “deteriorated”. Two alternative means of operationalising the psychotherapy outcome could be found. Measures for estimating symptomatic level, interpsychological functioning and social functioning were combined with the reliable change index (RCI) to assess observed changes. Another alternative formed measures to assess directly adverse effects of psychotherapy. Quantitative estimates of negative outcome were consistent: prevalence of deteriorated patients varied between 1 – 7% and share of non-responders was 39-67%