Moderators of short- and long-term outcomes in panic control treatment and panic-focused psychodynamic psychotherapy.
(2024) In Psychotherapy Research p.1-11- Abstract
- Objective: The objective was to test the hypothesis that externalizing and internalizing helpfulness beliefs and learning styles at baseline moderate panic severity and overall mental illness as short-term and long-term outcomes of two panic-focused psychotherapies, Panic Control Treatment (PCT) and Panic-Focused Psychodynamic Psychotherapy (PFPP).
Method: Participants were 108 adults with DSM-IV Panic Disorder with or without Agoraphobia (PD/A) who were randomized to treatment in a trial of PCT and PFPP. Piece-wise/segmented multilevel modeling was used to test three-way interactions (Treatments x Moderator x Time), with participants and therapists as random factors. Outcome variables were clinician-rated panic severity and self-rated... (More) - Objective: The objective was to test the hypothesis that externalizing and internalizing helpfulness beliefs and learning styles at baseline moderate panic severity and overall mental illness as short-term and long-term outcomes of two panic-focused psychotherapies, Panic Control Treatment (PCT) and Panic-Focused Psychodynamic Psychotherapy (PFPP).
Method: Participants were 108 adults with DSM-IV Panic Disorder with or without Agoraphobia (PD/A) who were randomized to treatment in a trial of PCT and PFPP. Piece-wise/segmented multilevel modeling was used to test three-way interactions (Treatments x Moderator x Time), with participants and therapists as random factors. Outcome variables were clinician-rated panic severity and self-rated mental illness post-treatment and during follow-up.
Results: Patients’ externalizing (but not internalizing) helpfulness beliefs moderated mental illness outcomes during follow-up (but not during treatment); low levels of Externalization were facilitative for PFPP but not PCT. Internalizing and externalizing helpfulness beliefs and learning style did not moderate clinician-rated panic severity, whether short- or long-term.
Conclusions: These results suggest that helpfulness beliefs and learning style have limited use in assignment to either PCT or PFPP for PD/A. Although further research is needed, low levels of helpfulness beliefs about externalizing coping may play a role in mental illness outcomes for PFPP. (Less)
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https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/1bee47fc-d165-449b-8687-93f5852f7d8e
- author
- Sandell, Rolf LU ; Falkenström, Fredrik ; Svensson, Martin LU ; Nilsson, Thomas LU ; Johansson, Håkan LU ; Viborg, Gardar LU and Perrin, Sean LU
- organization
- publishing date
- 2024-01-30
- type
- Contribution to journal
- publication status
- epub
- subject
- keywords
- panic disorder (PD), Agoraphobia, cognitive behavioral therapy, psychodynamic therapy (PDT), randomized controlled trial, moderators of outcome
- in
- Psychotherapy Research
- pages
- 11 pages
- publisher
- Taylor & Francis
- external identifiers
-
- pmid:38289698
- scopus:85183884073
- ISSN
- 1468-4381
- DOI
- 10.1080/10503307.2023.2294888
- project
- Long-Term Outcomes of Adults Treated with Panic-Focussed CBT and Psychodynamic Psychotherapies
- Long-Term Outcomes of Adults Treated with Panic-Focussed CBT and Psychodynamic Psychotherapies
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- yes
- id
- 1bee47fc-d165-449b-8687-93f5852f7d8e
- date added to LUP
- 2023-12-12 10:39:35
- date last changed
- 2024-04-04 04:01:41
@article{1bee47fc-d165-449b-8687-93f5852f7d8e, abstract = {{Objective: The objective was to test the hypothesis that externalizing and internalizing helpfulness beliefs and learning styles at baseline moderate panic severity and overall mental illness as short-term and long-term outcomes of two panic-focused psychotherapies, Panic Control Treatment (PCT) and Panic-Focused Psychodynamic Psychotherapy (PFPP).<br/>Method: Participants were 108 adults with DSM-IV Panic Disorder with or without Agoraphobia (PD/A) who were randomized to treatment in a trial of PCT and PFPP. Piece-wise/segmented multilevel modeling was used to test three-way interactions (Treatments x Moderator x Time), with participants and therapists as random factors. Outcome variables were clinician-rated panic severity and self-rated mental illness post-treatment and during follow-up. <br/>Results: Patients’ externalizing (but not internalizing) helpfulness beliefs moderated mental illness outcomes during follow-up (but not during treatment); low levels of Externalization were facilitative for PFPP but not PCT. Internalizing and externalizing helpfulness beliefs and learning style did not moderate clinician-rated panic severity, whether short- or long-term. <br/>Conclusions: These results suggest that helpfulness beliefs and learning style have limited use in assignment to either PCT or PFPP for PD/A. Although further research is needed, low levels of helpfulness beliefs about externalizing coping may play a role in mental illness outcomes for PFPP.}}, author = {{Sandell, Rolf and Falkenström, Fredrik and Svensson, Martin and Nilsson, Thomas and Johansson, Håkan and Viborg, Gardar and Perrin, Sean}}, issn = {{1468-4381}}, keywords = {{panic disorder (PD); Agoraphobia; cognitive behavioral therapy; psychodynamic therapy (PDT); randomized controlled trial; moderators of outcome}}, language = {{eng}}, month = {{01}}, pages = {{1--11}}, publisher = {{Taylor & Francis}}, series = {{Psychotherapy Research}}, title = {{Moderators of short- and long-term outcomes in panic control treatment and panic-focused psychodynamic psychotherapy.}}, url = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10503307.2023.2294888}}, doi = {{10.1080/10503307.2023.2294888}}, year = {{2024}}, }