Refine
Is part of the Bibliography
- yes (53)
Keywords
- psychotherapy (11)
- psychotherapy training (7)
- therapist competence (6)
- clinical supervision (5)
- hypochondriasis (5)
- psychotherapy process (5)
- Psychotherapy research (4)
- Simulated patients (4)
- Standardized patients (4)
- Systematic review (4)
- assessment (4)
- feedback (4)
- psychotherapeutic competencies (4)
- skills (4)
- Supervision (3)
- activity preference (3)
- learning (3)
- mental disorders (3)
- preference (3)
- preference assessment (3)
- qualitative content analysis (3)
- role-play (3)
- validation study (3)
- Clinical psychology (2)
- Clinical supervision (2)
- Education (2)
- Evidence-based psychotherapy (2)
- Fragebogen (2)
- Krankheitsangst (2)
- Lernen (2)
- Obsessive-compulsive disorder (2)
- Psychodiagnostics (2)
- Psychologiestudierende (2)
- Psychometric properties (2)
- Psychotherapeutic competencies (2)
- Psychotherapeutische Ausbildung (2)
- Psychotherapie (2)
- Qualitative Inhaltsanalyse (2)
- Randomized controlled trial (2)
- Role-playing (2)
- Screening (2)
- adherence (2)
- client preferences (2)
- cognitive behavioral therapy (2)
- cognitive-behavioural therapy (2)
- cognitive-behavioural therapy (CBT) (2)
- consultation (2)
- education (2)
- evidence-based training (2)
- expectancies (2)
- free association (2)
- health anxiety (2)
- illness anxiety disorder (2)
- interpersonal behavior (2)
- interview study (2)
- klinische Supervision (2)
- measurement (2)
- mental health (2)
- oncology (2)
- psychische Störungen (2)
- psycho-oncology (2)
- public involvement (2)
- review (2)
- standardized patient (2)
- therapeutic alliance (2)
- training (2)
- treatment integrity (2)
- Übersichtsarbeit (2)
- Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT), (1)
- Adherence (1)
- Adhärenz (1)
- Akzeptanz- und Commitmenttherapie (ACT) (1)
- Angststörungen (1)
- Anxiety disorders (1)
- Attribution (1)
- Ausbildung (1)
- Behandlungsintegrität (1)
- C-NIP (1)
- Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) (1)
- Cognitive behavior therapy (1)
- Evidenzbasierte Versorgung (1)
- Feedback (1)
- Health Norms Sorting Task (1)
- Hypochondriasis (1)
- Hypochondrie (1)
- Inhibition (1)
- Interpersonal behavior (1)
- Kognitiv-verhaltenstherapeutische Behandlung (1)
- Kognitive Verhaltenstherapie (1)
- Kognitive Verhaltenstherapie (KVT) (1)
- Kompetenz (1)
- Learning (1)
- Literaturrecherche (1)
- OCD (1)
- Panic disorder with agoraphobia (1)
- Psychometrie (1)
- Psychoterapie (1)
- Psychotherapeut_innen (1)
- Psychotherapeutische Kompetenzen (1)
- Review (1)
- Selbsterfahrung (1)
- Sensitivität und Spezifität (1)
- Simulationspatient_innen (1)
- Supervisee Levels Questionnaire (1)
- Therapeutic alliance (1)
- Therapist adherence (1)
- Therapist competence (1)
- Training (1)
- Treatment Integrity (1)
- activity preference; (1)
- alliance (1)
- anxiety disorder (1)
- attribution (1)
- authenticity (1)
- bug-in-the-eye (1)
- cognitive therapy (1)
- cognitive-behavioral therapy (1)
- competencies (1)
- competency (1)
- context effects (1)
- counseling self-efficacy (1)
- counselor activity self-efficacy scales (1)
- evidence-based care (1)
- evidenzbasiertes Training (1)
- exploratory structural equation modeling (1)
- exposure therapy (1)
- factor structure (1)
- general change mechanisms (1)
- illness anxiety (1)
- kognitive Verhaltenstheraphie (1)
- kognitive Verhaltenstherapie (1)
- literature search (1)
- live supervision (1)
- long-term follow-up (1)
- major depression (1)
- mental hypochondriasis (1)
- mentale Hypochondrie (1)
- meta-analysis (1)
- non-response (1)
- outcome (1)
- panic disorder with agoraphobia (1)
- personal practice (1)
- predictors of outcome (1)
- prevention (1)
- process research (1)
- psychology (1)
- psychology students (1)
- psychometrics (1)
- psychotherapists (1)
- psychotherapy trainees (1)
- questionnaire (1)
- questionnaires (1)
- randomized controlled trial (1)
- scoping study (1)
- sensitivity and specificity (1)
- simulated patients (1)
- simulation-based (1)
- simulationsbasierte Lehre (1)
- skill (1)
- somatic symptom disorder (1)
- standardized patients (1)
- students (1)
- supervisory strategies (1)
- symptom evaluation (1)
- systematic review (1)
- therapeutic (1)
- therapeutic competence (1)
- therapeutische (1)
- treatment outcome (1)
- treatment response (1)
- validation (1)
Changes in Free Symptom Attributions in Hypochondriasis after Cognitive Therapy and Exposure Therapy
(2016)
Treatment delivery factors (i.e., therapist adherence, therapist competence, and therapeutic alliance) are considered to be important for cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) for panic disorder and agoraphobia (PD/AG). In the current study, four independent raters conducted process evaluations based on 168 two-hour videotapes of 84 patients with PD/AG treated with exposure-based CBT. Two raters evaluated patients’ interpersonal behavior in Session 1. Two raters evaluated treatment delivery factors in Session 6, in which therapists provided the rationale for conducting exposure exercises. At the 6-month follow-up, therapists’ adherence (r = 0.54) and therapeutic alliance (r = 0.31) were significant predictors of changes in agoraphobic avoidance behavior; therapist competence was not associated with treatment outcomes. Patients’ interpersonal behavior in Session 1 was a significant predictor of the therapeutic alliance in Session 6 (r = 0.17). The findings demonstrate that treatment delivery factors, particularly therapist adherence, are relevant to the long-term success of CBT for PD/AG.
Changes in free symptom attributions in hypochondriasis after cognitive therapy and exposure therapy
(2016)
Background: Cognitive-behavioural therapy can change dysfunctional symptom attributions in patients with hypochondriasis. Past research has used forced-choice answer formats, such as questionnaires, to assess these misattributions; however, with this approach, idiosyncratic attributions cannot be assessed. Free associations are an important complement to existing approaches that assess symptom attributions. Aims: With this study, we contribute to the current literature by using an open-response instrument to investigate changes in freely associated attributions after exposure therapy (ET) and cognitive therapy (CT) compared with a wait list (WL). Method: The current study is a re-examination of a formerly published randomized controlled trial (Weck, Neng, Richtberg, Jakob and Stangier, 2015) that investigated the effectiveness of CT and ET. Seventy-three patients with hypochondriasis were randomly assigned to CT, ET or a WL, and completed a 12-week treatment (or waiting period). Before and after the treatment or waiting period, patients completed an Attribution task in which they had to spontaneously attribute nine common bodily sensations to possible causes in an open-response format. Results: Compared with the WL, both CT and ET reduced the frequency of somatic attributions regarding severe diseases (CT: Hedges's g = 1.12; ET: Hedges's g = 1.03) and increased the frequency of normalizing attributions (CT: Hedges's g = 1.17; ET: Hedges's g = 1.24). Only CT changed the attributions regarding moderate diseases (Hedges's g = 0.69). Changes in somatic attributions regarding mild diseases and psychological attributions were not observed. Conclusions: Both CT and ET are effective for treating freely associated misattributions in patients with hypochondriasis. This study supplements research that used a forced-choice assessment.