0000000000123989

AUTHOR

Thomas Probst

0000-0002-6113-2133

showing 2 related works from this author

Patients' and therapists' experiences of general change mechanisms during bug-in-the-eye and delayed video-based supervised cognitive-behavioral ther…

2016

Objective This secondary analysis of a randomized controlled trial investigated whether bug-in-the-eye (BITE) supervision (live computer-based supervision during a psychotherapy session) affects the manner in which patients and therapists experience general change mechanisms (GCMs) during cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT). Method A total of 23 therapists were randomized either to the BITE condition or the control condition (delayed video-based [DVB] supervision). After each session, both patients (BITE: n = 19; DVB: n = 23) and therapists (BITE: n = 11; DVB: n = 12) completed the Helping Alliance Questionnaire (HAQ) and the Bernese Post Session Report (BPSR). The HAQ total score and the 3 …

AdultMale050103 clinical psychologymedicine.medical_specialtyInservice TrainingTherapeutic Alliancemedicine.medical_treatmentFeedback PsychologicalHealth PersonnelPsychological interventionVideo RecordingInterpersonal communicationlaw.invention03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)Randomized controlled triallawDigital Video BroadcastingMedicinePsychologyHumans0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesSession (computer science)Cognitive Behavioral Therapybusiness.industryMental Disorders05 social sciencesMultilevel modelMiddle Aged030227 psychiatryCognitive behavioral therapyClinical PsychologyOutcome and Process Assessment Health CareOrganization and AdministrationPhysical therapyFemalebusinessIntrapersonal communicationJournal of clinical psychology
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Suppressor effects in associations between patient attachment to therapist and psychotherapy outcome

2018

Abstract Objective Several studies propose that patient attachment to therapist is associated with therapy outcome. However, the magnitude of the effect is diverse, which might be explicable by suppressor effects and the new concept of pseudo‐security. Method Associations between patient attachment to therapist (client‐attachment‐to‐therapist‐scale [CATS]) and psychotherapy outcome (“global severity index” of the Symptom Check List) were evaluated in N = 368 patients. Multilevel models were performed. Results When tested in separate models, secure attachment to therapist was associated with a more favourable outcome (p < 0.05), whereas avoidant and preoccupied attachment to therapist were c…

AdultMale050103 clinical psychologyPsychotherapistAdolescentSeverity of Illness Indexbehavioral disciplines and activitiesOutcome (game theory)Young Adult03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineSymptom check listGermanyAttachment theoryHumans0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesResearch ArticlesattachmentAgedTherapy OutcomeMental Disorders05 social sciencesProfessional-Patient RelationsMiddle AgedObject Attachment030227 psychiatryPsychotherapyClinical PsychologyTreatment OutcomeoutcomeFemalePsychologyhuman activitiesResearch ArticleClinical Psychology &amp; Psychotherapy
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