1. Intensive multidisciplinary treatment of severe somatoform disorder: a prospective evaluation.
- Author
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Houtveen JH, van Broeckhuysen-Kloth S, Lintmeijer LL, Bühring ME, and Geenen R
- Subjects
- Adult, Anxiety physiopathology, Chronic Disease, Depression physiopathology, Female, Health Services economics, Health Services statistics & numerical data, Humans, Individuality, Male, Middle Aged, Prospective Studies, Severity of Illness Index, Somatoform Disorders physiopathology, Stress, Psychological physiopathology, Tertiary Healthcare, Treatment Outcome, Anxiety therapy, Depression therapy, Psychotherapy methods, Quality of Life psychology, Somatoform Disorders therapy, Stress, Psychological therapy
- Abstract
Chronic severe somatoform disorder (SFD) is resistant to treatment. In a prospective observational study, we evaluated an intensive multidisciplinary treatment focusing on body-related mentalization and acceptance. Patients included in the study were 183 (146 women, 37 men) of 311 eligible patients with chronic severe SFD, referred consecutively to a specialized tertiary care center between 2002 and 2009. Primary outcome measures were somatic symptoms (SCL-90) and health-related quality of life (EuroQol 5-Dimensional [EQ-5D]). These measures were assessed four times before treatment (on intake, twice during an observation period, at start of treatment) and four times after treatment (during follow-up for 2 years). Multilevel analysis was used to separate effects of time (maturation) and treatment. Results revealed significant improvements in SCL-90 somatic symptoms (d = 0.51), EQ-5D index (d = 0.27), and EQ visual analogue scale (d = 0.56). Significant reductions were also observed in SCL-90 anxiety, depression, and overall psychopathology as well as in medical consumption associated with psychiatric illness (Trimbos/iMTA Questionnaire for Costs Associated With Psychiatric Illness). Large interindividual differences were found in treatment outcome. The long-term improvement seen in many patients suggests that intensive multidisciplinary tertiary care treatment is a useful approach to chronic severe SFD.
- Published
- 2015
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