网络认知行为治疗中客户故事的感知:一种混合方法评估

Heather D. Hadjistavropoulos , Taylor G. Hill , Aaron E. Philipp-Muller , Blake Dear , Nick Titov
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引用次数: 0

摘要

互联网提供的认知行为疗法(ICBT)旨在利用在线治疗材料支持有心理健康问题的人。在ICBT中经常使用客户故事(真实的或基于许多客户的组合)来促进学习。然而,就客户如何看待这些故事,以及它们与ICBT参与、满意度和结果的关系而言,这些故事仍未得到充分研究。在324名参与以抑郁和焦虑症状为目标的跨诊断ICBT的客户样本中,我们通过混合方法定性(开放式)和定量(封闭式)数据收集来检查客户对故事的感知。具体来说,234名(72.22%)患者在第4周时回答了关于故事的问题,221名(68.21%)患者在第8周时回答了问题。回答问题的大多数客户支持至少回顾一些故事(第4周时79.06%,第8周时71.95%)。此外,他们在故事的相关性、让客户感到不那么孤独、增加知识、提供如何使用技能的想法以及激励客户使用技能方面给予了积极的评价。这些对故事的感知在治疗过程中保持稳定。在8周时症状严重程度较低的患者以及在8周时对ICBT更满意的患者中,故事的感知更积极。在控制基线评分、年龄和教育程度的情况下,第4周的故事感知可以预测治疗后焦虑症状严重程度的降低,但不能预测抑郁。第4周时,26.49%的客户回顾了故事,第8周时,33.33%的客户提供了如何改进故事的建议。在定性分析中,我们发现了5类建议,包括增加问题的多样性和故事的相关性,确保故事的真实性,改进格式,使故事更短。总的来说,本研究为如何改进客户故事在未来的ICBT项目中发挥更重要的作用提供了见解。
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Perceptions of client stories in internet-delivered cognitive behaviour therapy: A mixed-methods evaluation

Internet-delivered Cognitive-Behavioural Therapy (ICBT) aims to support people with mental health concerns using online treatment materials. Client stories (either real or a composite based on many clients) are often used in ICBT to facilitate learning. However, these stories remain understudied in terms of how they are perceived by clients, as well as their relationship to ICBT engagement, satisfaction, and outcomes. Among a sample of 324 clients enrolled in transdiagnostic ICBT targeting symptoms of depression and anxiety, we examined client perceptions of stories through mixed-method qualitative (open-ended) and quantitative (closed-ended) data collection. Specifically, 234 (72.22 %) clients responded to questions about stories at 4 weeks and 221 (68.21 %) responded to questions at 8 weeks. Most clients who responded to questions endorsed reviewing at least some stories (79.06 % at 4 weeks, 71.95 % at 8 weeks). Moreover, they rated stories positively in terms of being relatable, making clients feel less alone, increasing knowledge, providing ideas for how to use skills, and motivating clients to use skills. These perceptions of stories remained stable over the course of treatment. Stories were perceived more positively among those with lower symptom severity at 8 weeks as well as those who were more satisfied with ICBT at 8 weeks. Story perceptions at 4 weeks were predictive of decreased post-treatment anxiety symptom severity but not depression while controlling for baseline scores, age, and education. 26.49 % of clients at 4 weeks who reviewed stories and 33.33 % at 8 weeks provided suggestions about how to improve stories. In a qualitative analysis, we found 5 categories of suggestions including increasing the variety of issues and relatability of stories, ensuring the stories are realistic, refining the formatting, and making the stories shorter. Overall, this study provides insights into how client stories could be improved to play a more significant role in future ICBT programs.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
6.50
自引率
9.30%
发文量
94
审稿时长
6 weeks
期刊介绍: Official Journal of the European Society for Research on Internet Interventions (ESRII) and the International Society for Research on Internet Interventions (ISRII). The aim of Internet Interventions is to publish scientific, peer-reviewed, high-impact research on Internet interventions and related areas. Internet Interventions welcomes papers on the following subjects: • Intervention studies targeting the promotion of mental health and featuring the Internet and/or technologies using the Internet as an underlying technology, e.g. computers, smartphone devices, tablets, sensors • Implementation and dissemination of Internet interventions • Integration of Internet interventions into existing systems of care • Descriptions of development and deployment infrastructures • Internet intervention methodology and theory papers • Internet-based epidemiology • Descriptions of new Internet-based technologies and experiments with clinical applications • Economics of internet interventions (cost-effectiveness) • Health care policy and Internet interventions • The role of culture in Internet intervention • Internet psychometrics • Ethical issues pertaining to Internet interventions and measurements • Human-computer interaction and usability research with clinical implications • Systematic reviews and meta-analysis on Internet interventions
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