Journal article

Psychosomatic inpatient treatment: Real-world effectiveness, response rates and the helping alliance


Authors listSteinert, Christiane; Kruse, Johannes; Leweke, Frank; Leichsenring, Falk

Publication year2019

JournalJournal of Psychosomatic Research

Volume number124

ISSN0022-3999

eISSN1879-1360

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1016/j.jpsychores.2019.109743

PublisherElsevier


Abstract

Objective: While inpatient mental health treatments in real-world settings have shown to be generally effective with moderate to large pre-post effects, little is known about rates of response in inpatients.

Methods: Inpatients routinely treated at a university hospital for psychosomatics and psychotherapy in Germany were assessed before and after receiving a psychodynamically oriented multimodal treatment. As primary outcome response rates based on the Symptom Checklist-90-Revised (SCL-90-R) were used. As secondary outcomes, pre-post effect sizes on measures of symptoms and stress (SCL-90-R, Hospital anxiety and depression scale, Perceived stress questionnaire) as well as interpersonal problems (IIP) were determined. Additionally, the relationship of the helping alliance to outcome was examined.

Results: A total of 709 patients with various primary diagnoses and high mental (72.4%) and physical (61%) comorbidity, receiving on average 7.9 weeks of treatment, were included. The response rate based on the SCL-90-R global severity index was 62.9% at posttreatment and 60.4% at short-term follow up. Pre-post effect sizes on symptom and stress measures were large (Cohen's d >= 1.0) while change regarding interpersonal problems was small (d = 0.34). For patients responding to treatment a significantly better helping alliance was found, corresponding to a large effect (d = 0.84).

Conclusions: A majority of patients benefitted considerably from a psychosomatic inpatient treatment in terms of response and pre-post effects. Response was significantly related to the quality of the therapeutic alliance. Monitoring and improving alliance may enhance treatment outcome.




Citation Styles

Harvard Citation styleSteinert, C., Kruse, J., Leweke, F. and Leichsenring, F. (2019) Psychosomatic inpatient treatment: Real-world effectiveness, response rates and the helping alliance, Journal of psychosomatic research, 124, Article 109743. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jpsychores.2019.109743

APA Citation styleSteinert, C., Kruse, J., Leweke, F., & Leichsenring, F. (2019). Psychosomatic inpatient treatment: Real-world effectiveness, response rates and the helping alliance. Journal of psychosomatic research. 124, Article 109743. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jpsychores.2019.109743



Keywords


DEPRESSION DIP-DeffectivenessHAQHelping alliancePERCEIVED STRESS QUESTIONNAIREPsychosomatic inpatient treatmentREMISSION

Last updated on 2025-21-05 at 18:25