Psychoeducation against depression, anxiety, alexithymia and fibromyalgia : a pilot study in primary care for patients on sick leave
(2018) In Scandinavian Journal of Primary Health Care 36(2). p.123-133- Abstract
Objectives: Feasibility testing of a psychoeducational method -The Affect School and Script Analyses (ASSA)–in a Swedish primary care setting. Exploring associations between psychological, and medically unexplained physical symptoms (MUPS). Design: Pilot study. Setting: Three Swedish primary care centers serving 20,000 people. Intervention: 8 weekly 2-hour sessions with a 5–7 participant group led by two instructors - followed by 10 individual hour-long sessions. Subjects: Thirty-six patients, 29 women (81%), on sick-leave due to depression, anxiety, or fibromyalgia. Outcome measures: Feasibility in terms of participation rates and expected improvements of psychological symptoms and MUPS, assessed by self-report instruments pre-,... (More)
Objectives: Feasibility testing of a psychoeducational method -The Affect School and Script Analyses (ASSA)–in a Swedish primary care setting. Exploring associations between psychological, and medically unexplained physical symptoms (MUPS). Design: Pilot study. Setting: Three Swedish primary care centers serving 20,000 people. Intervention: 8 weekly 2-hour sessions with a 5–7 participant group led by two instructors - followed by 10 individual hour-long sessions. Subjects: Thirty-six patients, 29 women (81%), on sick-leave due to depression, anxiety, or fibromyalgia. Outcome measures: Feasibility in terms of participation rates and expected improvements of psychological symptoms and MUPS, assessed by self-report instruments pre-, one-week post-, and 18 months post-intervention. Regression coefficients between psychological symptoms and MUPS. Results: The entire 26-hour psychoeducational intervention was completed by 30 patients (83%), and 33 patients (92%) completed the 16-hour Affect School. One-week post-intervention median test score changes were significantly favorable for 27 respondents, with p <.05 after correction for multiple testing for 9 of 11 measures (depression, anxiety, alexithymia, MUPS, general health, self-affirmation, self-love, self-blame, and self-hate); 18 months post intervention the results remained significantly favorable for 15 respondents for 7 of 11 measures (depression, alexithymia, MUPS, general health, self-affirmation, self-love, and self-hate). Conclusions: A psychoeducational method previously untested in primary care for mostly women patients on sick-leave due to depression, anxiety, or fibromyalgia had >80% participation rates, and clear improvements of self-assessed psychological symptoms and MUPS. The ASSA intervention thus showed adequate feasibility in a Swedish primary care setting.Key Points A pilot study of a psychoeducational intervention–The Affect School and Script Analyses (ASSA)–was performed in primary care • The intervention showed feasibility for patients on sick-leave due to depression, anxiety, or fibromyalgia • 92% completed the 8 weeks/16 hours Affect School and 83% completed the entire 26-hour ASSA intervention • 9 of 11 self-reported measures improved significantly one-week post intervention • 7 of 11 self-reported measures improved significantly 18 months post-intervention.
(Less)
- author
- Melin, Eva O. LU ; Svensson, Ralph and Thulesius, Hans O. LU
- organization
- publishing date
- 2018-04-03
- type
- Contribution to journal
- publication status
- published
- subject
- keywords
- Affective symptoms, alexithymia, anxiety, depression, general practice, medically unexplained physical symptoms, psychotherapy
- in
- Scandinavian Journal of Primary Health Care
- volume
- 36
- issue
- 2
- pages
- 11 pages
- publisher
- Taylor & Francis
- external identifiers
-
- pmid:29693478
- scopus:85046014270
- ISSN
- 0281-3432
- DOI
- 10.1080/02813432.2018.1459225
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- yes
- id
- b0189dc1-d6a0-4ce8-ba04-76b501951a79
- date added to LUP
- 2018-05-14 14:45:55
- date last changed
- 2024-08-05 17:25:18
@article{b0189dc1-d6a0-4ce8-ba04-76b501951a79, abstract = {{<p>Objectives: Feasibility testing of a psychoeducational method -The Affect School and Script Analyses (ASSA)–in a Swedish primary care setting. Exploring associations between psychological, and medically unexplained physical symptoms (MUPS). Design: Pilot study. Setting: Three Swedish primary care centers serving 20,000 people. Intervention: 8 weekly 2-hour sessions with a 5–7 participant group led by two instructors - followed by 10 individual hour-long sessions. Subjects: Thirty-six patients, 29 women (81%), on sick-leave due to depression, anxiety, or fibromyalgia. Outcome measures: Feasibility in terms of participation rates and expected improvements of psychological symptoms and MUPS, assessed by self-report instruments pre-, one-week post-, and 18 months post-intervention. Regression coefficients between psychological symptoms and MUPS. Results: The entire 26-hour psychoeducational intervention was completed by 30 patients (83%), and 33 patients (92%) completed the 16-hour Affect School. One-week post-intervention median test score changes were significantly favorable for 27 respondents, with p <.05 after correction for multiple testing for 9 of 11 measures (depression, anxiety, alexithymia, MUPS, general health, self-affirmation, self-love, self-blame, and self-hate); 18 months post intervention the results remained significantly favorable for 15 respondents for 7 of 11 measures (depression, alexithymia, MUPS, general health, self-affirmation, self-love, and self-hate). Conclusions: A psychoeducational method previously untested in primary care for mostly women patients on sick-leave due to depression, anxiety, or fibromyalgia had >80% participation rates, and clear improvements of self-assessed psychological symptoms and MUPS. The ASSA intervention thus showed adequate feasibility in a Swedish primary care setting.Key Points A pilot study of a psychoeducational intervention–The Affect School and Script Analyses (ASSA)–was performed in primary care • The intervention showed feasibility for patients on sick-leave due to depression, anxiety, or fibromyalgia • 92% completed the 8 weeks/16 hours Affect School and 83% completed the entire 26-hour ASSA intervention • 9 of 11 self-reported measures improved significantly one-week post intervention • 7 of 11 self-reported measures improved significantly 18 months post-intervention.</p>}}, author = {{Melin, Eva O. and Svensson, Ralph and Thulesius, Hans O.}}, issn = {{0281-3432}}, keywords = {{Affective symptoms; alexithymia; anxiety; depression; general practice; medically unexplained physical symptoms; psychotherapy}}, language = {{eng}}, month = {{04}}, number = {{2}}, pages = {{123--133}}, publisher = {{Taylor & Francis}}, series = {{Scandinavian Journal of Primary Health Care}}, title = {{Psychoeducation against depression, anxiety, alexithymia and fibromyalgia : a pilot study in primary care for patients on sick leave}}, url = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02813432.2018.1459225}}, doi = {{10.1080/02813432.2018.1459225}}, volume = {{36}}, year = {{2018}}, }