Various studies have shown that a more positive outcome expectation can have an influence on the actual treatment outcome of outpatient psychotherapeutic treatments. Therefore, the aim of this online study is to investigate whether \[1\] the patients' outcome expectation of outpatient psychotherapy can be optimized by a brief nonguided online intervention and whether \[2\] this intervention can influence important factors of psychotherapy, such as active cooperation, the therapeutic relationship, motivation, and regular attendance to therapy. To examine these questions, patients who are waiting for outpatient therapy will be randomized into two groups (control vs. intervention group) after baseline assessment. The intervention group will participate in a brief therapy preparation (30 minutes) that focuses on optimizing outcome expectations. Both groups will fill out questionnaires again on the following day, during the diagnostic phase at the beginning of therapy and six months later (or at the end of therapy in case therapy ends before the 6-month-follow-up). Furthermore, therapists will also fill out questionnaires during the diagnostic phase at the beginning of therapy and six months later (or at the end of therapy in case therapy ends before the 6-month-follow-up).
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
81
Patients receive an expectation-focused online intervention (around 30 minutes) consisting of a video with general information about psychotherapy, a video with reports of patients' therapy experiences, questions on the content of the videos as well as open questions on personal strengths, fears and expectations in the context of therapy. This intervention aims to optimize patients' expectations by focusing on positive and realistic expectations regarding the psychotherapeutic process.
Department of Clinical Psychology and Psychotherapy, Philipps-University Marburg
Marburg, Germany
Change in outcome expectation (Credibility and Expectancy Questionnaire (CEQ) scale) from Baseline to T1
German version of the Credibility and Expectancy Questionnaire (CEQ), 6-item scale (Raeke, 2013).The CEQ consists of two subscales with four items measuring cognitive-focused credibility (e.g., "At this point, how logical does the therapy offered to you seem?") and two items measuring affect-focused expectations (e.g., "By the end of the therapy period, how much improvement in your symptoms do you really feel will occur?"). The CEQ applies different rating scales; a 9-point scale ranging from 1 (not at all) to 9 (very much) and a percentage rating scale ranging from 0% (not at all) to 100% (very much) with higher sum scores indicating greater treatment credibility and expectations.
Time frame: Baseline, T1 (following day)
Change in outcome expectation (Credibility and Expectancy Questionnaire (CEQ) scale) from Baseline to T2 to T3
German version of the Credibility and Expectancy Questionnaire (CEQ), 6-item scale (Raeke, 2013).The CEQ consists of two subscales with four items measuring cognitive-focused credibility (e.g., "At this point, how logical does the therapy offered to you seem?") and two items measuring affect-focused expectations (e.g., "By the end of the therapy period, how much improvement in your symptoms do you really feel will occur?"). The CEQ applies different rating scales; a 9-point scale ranging from 1 (not at all) to 9 (very much) and a percentage rating scale ranging from 0% (not at all) to 100% (very much) with higher sum scores indicating greater treatment credibility and expectations.
Time frame: Baseline, T2 (start of therapy), T3 (6-month-follow-up)
Change in outcome expectation and process expectations (Milwaukee Psychotherapy Expectations Questionnaire (MPEQ)) from Baseline to T1 to T2 to T3
German version of the Milwaukee Psychotherapy Expectations Questionnaire (MPEQ), measures outcome expectations and process expectations (Norberg et al., 2011) with four outcome expectation questions, ask about expected improvements in self-respect, strength to avoid feelings of distress, being a better person, and being a more optimistic person by the end of therapy.
Time frame: Baseline, T1 (following day), T2 (start of therapy), T3 (6-month-follow-up)
Change in scores on the subscale for treatment expectations of the the generic rating scale for previous treatment experiences, treatment expectations, and treatment effects (GEEE) from baseline to T1 to T2 to T3
Prior experiences with psychotherapy and treatment expectations are measured via the generic rating scale for previous treatment experiences, treatment expectations, and treatment effects (GEEE), subscale for previous treatment experiences and subscale for treatment expectations (Rief et al., 2021). Answers are provided on a numeric rating scale ranging from 0 to 10.
Time frame: Baseline, T1 (following day), T2 (start of therapy), T3 (6-month-follow-up)
Change in symptom severity (Beck Depression Inventory (BDI-II), Patient Health Questionnaire 4 (PHQ-4), Symptom Checklist-90-Revised (SCL-90-R))
BDI-II: Self-report questionnaire to assess subjective depression symptomatology; 21 items (each item response is scored 0-3); total scores range from 0 - 63 (higher scores indicate more depressiveness) SCL-90-R: Self-report questionnaire to evaluate a broad range of psychological problems and symptoms of psychopathology, 90 items, 5-point rating scale. PHQ-4: Self-report questionnaire to screen for psychological distress, 4-point rating scale, total scores range from 0 - 12, subscales for depression and anxiety range from 0 - 6.
Time frame: Baseline, T2 (start of therapy), T3 (6-month-follow-up)
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