Treatment Dropout among Veterans and their Families: Quantitative and Qualitative Findings
Autor: | Hemrie Zalman, Yuval Neria, Arturo Sanchez-Lacay, Benjamin Suarez-Jimenez, John C. Markowitz, Sara Such, Amit Lazarov, Ari Lowell, Doron Amsalem, Matt Ryba, Maja Bergman, Andrea Lopez-Yianilos, Xi Zhu, Alison M. Pickover, Shay Arnon |
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Jazyk: | angličtina |
Rok vydání: | 2021 |
Předmět: |
Coping (psychology)
medicine.medical_specialty Social Psychology Population Implosive Therapy Context (language use) PsycINFO behavioral disciplines and activities Article Stress Disorders Post-Traumatic Rating scale mental disorders medicine Humans Psychiatry education Depression (differential diagnoses) Veterans education.field_of_study Depressive Disorder Major business.industry Beck Depression Inventory Discontinuation Clinical Psychology Military Personnel business |
Zdroj: | Psychol Trauma |
Popis: | BACKGROUND Psychotherapy noncompletion rates for veterans and their families are high. This study sought to (a) measure noncompletion rates of such patients at a university-based treatment center, (b) compare veteran and family member attrition rates, (c) identify dropout predictors, and (d) explore clinicians' perspectives on treatment noncompletion. METHOD Using quantitative and qualitative approaches, we analyzed demographic and clinical characteristics of 141 patients (90 military veterans; 51 family members) in a university treatment center. We defined dropout as not completing the time-limited therapy contract. Reviewing semistructured interview data assessing clinicians' perspectives on their patients' dropout, three independent raters agreed on key themes, with interrater coefficient kappa range .74 to 1. RESULTS Patient attrition was 24%, not differing significantly between veterans and family members. Diagnosis of major depression (MDD) and exposure-based therapies predicted noncompletion, as did higher baseline Hamilton Depression Rating Scale (HDRS) total scores, severe depression (HDRS > 20), lack of Beck Depression Inventory weekly improvement, and history of military sexual trauma. Clinicians mostly attributed noncompletion to patient difficulties coping with intense emotions, especially in exposure-based therapies. CONCLUSION Noncompletion rate at this study appeared relatively low compared to other veteran-based treatment centers, if still unfortunately substantial. Patients with comorbid MDD/PTSD and exposure-based therapies carried greater noncompletion risk due to the MDD component, and this should be considered in treatment planning. Ongoing discussion of dissatisfaction and patient discontinuation, in the context of a strong therapeutic alliance, might reduce noncompletion in this at-risk population. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved). |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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