Optimizing treatment expectations and decision making through informed consent for psychotherapy

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Optimizing treatment expectations and decision making through informed consent for psychotherapy : A randomized controlled trial. / Gerke, Leonie; Pauls, Franz; Ladwig, Sönke; Liebherz, Sarah; Reininger, Klaus Michael; Kriston, Levente; Trachsel, Manuel; Härter, Martin; Nestoriuc, Yvonne.

In: J CONSULT CLIN PSYCH, Vol. 92, No. 2, 02.2024, p. 93-104.

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@article{9a5fb003d0ba4fb9acb1b511e85bbf3e,
title = "Optimizing treatment expectations and decision making through informed consent for psychotherapy: A randomized controlled trial",
abstract = "OBJECTIVE: The objective of this research was to determine the efficacy and safety of an optimized informed consent (OIC) consultation for psychotherapy.METHOD: We performed a randomized controlled superiority online trial involving 2 weeks of treatment and 3 months of follow-up. One hundred twenty-two adults with mental disorders confirmed by structured interview currently neither in out- nor inpatient psychotherapy (mean age: 32, gender identity: 51.6% female, 1.6% diverse), were randomized. Participants received an information brochure about psychotherapy for self-study (treatment as usual [TAU]; n = 61) or TAU plus a one-session OIC utilizing expectation management, contextualization, framing, and shared decision making (n = 61). The primary outcome was treatment expectations at 2-week follow-up.RESULTS: At 2-week follow-up, participants receiving OIC showed more positive treatment expectations compared to those receiving TAU only (mean difference: 0.70, 95% CI [0.36, 1.04]) with a medium effect size (d = 0.73). Likewise, OIC positively influenced motivation (d = 0.74) and adherence intention (d = 0.46). OIC entailed large effects on reduction of decisional conflict (d = 0.91) and increase of knowledge (d = 0.93). Participants receiving OIC showed higher capacity to consent to treatment (d = 0.63) and higher satisfaction with received information (d = 1.34) compared to TAU. No statistically significant group differences resulted for expected adverse effects of psychotherapy. Results were maintained at 3-month follow-up. Data sets for n = 10 cases (8.2%) were missing (postassessment n = 4, 2-week n = 6, 3-month follow-up n = 8).CONCLUSIONS: Explaining to patients how psychotherapy works via a short consultation was effective in strengthening treatment expectations and decision making in a nonharmful way. Further trials clarifying whether this effectively translates to better treatment outcomes are required. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).",
author = "Leonie Gerke and Franz Pauls and S{\"o}nke Ladwig and Sarah Liebherz and Reininger, {Klaus Michael} and Levente Kriston and Manuel Trachsel and Martin H{\"a}rter and Yvonne Nestoriuc",
year = "2024",
month = feb,
doi = "10.1037/ccp0000851",
language = "English",
volume = "92",
pages = "93--104",
journal = "J CONSULT CLIN PSYCH",
issn = "0022-006X",
publisher = "American Psychological Association Inc.",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Optimizing treatment expectations and decision making through informed consent for psychotherapy

T2 - A randomized controlled trial

AU - Gerke, Leonie

AU - Pauls, Franz

AU - Ladwig, Sönke

AU - Liebherz, Sarah

AU - Reininger, Klaus Michael

AU - Kriston, Levente

AU - Trachsel, Manuel

AU - Härter, Martin

AU - Nestoriuc, Yvonne

PY - 2024/2

Y1 - 2024/2

N2 - OBJECTIVE: The objective of this research was to determine the efficacy and safety of an optimized informed consent (OIC) consultation for psychotherapy.METHOD: We performed a randomized controlled superiority online trial involving 2 weeks of treatment and 3 months of follow-up. One hundred twenty-two adults with mental disorders confirmed by structured interview currently neither in out- nor inpatient psychotherapy (mean age: 32, gender identity: 51.6% female, 1.6% diverse), were randomized. Participants received an information brochure about psychotherapy for self-study (treatment as usual [TAU]; n = 61) or TAU plus a one-session OIC utilizing expectation management, contextualization, framing, and shared decision making (n = 61). The primary outcome was treatment expectations at 2-week follow-up.RESULTS: At 2-week follow-up, participants receiving OIC showed more positive treatment expectations compared to those receiving TAU only (mean difference: 0.70, 95% CI [0.36, 1.04]) with a medium effect size (d = 0.73). Likewise, OIC positively influenced motivation (d = 0.74) and adherence intention (d = 0.46). OIC entailed large effects on reduction of decisional conflict (d = 0.91) and increase of knowledge (d = 0.93). Participants receiving OIC showed higher capacity to consent to treatment (d = 0.63) and higher satisfaction with received information (d = 1.34) compared to TAU. No statistically significant group differences resulted for expected adverse effects of psychotherapy. Results were maintained at 3-month follow-up. Data sets for n = 10 cases (8.2%) were missing (postassessment n = 4, 2-week n = 6, 3-month follow-up n = 8).CONCLUSIONS: Explaining to patients how psychotherapy works via a short consultation was effective in strengthening treatment expectations and decision making in a nonharmful way. Further trials clarifying whether this effectively translates to better treatment outcomes are required. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).

AB - OBJECTIVE: The objective of this research was to determine the efficacy and safety of an optimized informed consent (OIC) consultation for psychotherapy.METHOD: We performed a randomized controlled superiority online trial involving 2 weeks of treatment and 3 months of follow-up. One hundred twenty-two adults with mental disorders confirmed by structured interview currently neither in out- nor inpatient psychotherapy (mean age: 32, gender identity: 51.6% female, 1.6% diverse), were randomized. Participants received an information brochure about psychotherapy for self-study (treatment as usual [TAU]; n = 61) or TAU plus a one-session OIC utilizing expectation management, contextualization, framing, and shared decision making (n = 61). The primary outcome was treatment expectations at 2-week follow-up.RESULTS: At 2-week follow-up, participants receiving OIC showed more positive treatment expectations compared to those receiving TAU only (mean difference: 0.70, 95% CI [0.36, 1.04]) with a medium effect size (d = 0.73). Likewise, OIC positively influenced motivation (d = 0.74) and adherence intention (d = 0.46). OIC entailed large effects on reduction of decisional conflict (d = 0.91) and increase of knowledge (d = 0.93). Participants receiving OIC showed higher capacity to consent to treatment (d = 0.63) and higher satisfaction with received information (d = 1.34) compared to TAU. No statistically significant group differences resulted for expected adverse effects of psychotherapy. Results were maintained at 3-month follow-up. Data sets for n = 10 cases (8.2%) were missing (postassessment n = 4, 2-week n = 6, 3-month follow-up n = 8).CONCLUSIONS: Explaining to patients how psychotherapy works via a short consultation was effective in strengthening treatment expectations and decision making in a nonharmful way. Further trials clarifying whether this effectively translates to better treatment outcomes are required. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).

U2 - 10.1037/ccp0000851

DO - 10.1037/ccp0000851

M3 - SCORING: Journal article

C2 - 37971812

VL - 92

SP - 93

EP - 104

JO - J CONSULT CLIN PSYCH

JF - J CONSULT CLIN PSYCH

SN - 0022-006X

IS - 2

ER -