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Is There an Evidence-Based Number of Sessions in Outpatient Psychotherapy? - A Comparison of Naturalistic Conditions across Countries

Authors :
Jaime Delgadillo
Christoph Flückiger
Andreea Vîslă
Bruce E. Wampold
Julian A. Rubel
Wolfgang Lutz
University of Zurich
Flückiger, Christoph
Source :
Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Deciding on the number of psychotherapy sessions to satisfactorily treat a patient is a vital clinical as well as economic issue in most mental health systems worldwide. The length of outpatient psychotherapy in naturalistic conditions ranges from a single session to hundreds of sessions [1]. In randomized clinical trials, the number of sessions is typically fixed to deliver manualized treatments and to control for dosage effects (e.g., in a 16-session format [2]). Using data from Routine Outcome Monitoring studies [3, 4], we investigated whether the treatments under naturalistic conditions were fixed to a particular number of sessions or not (H1), whether naturalistic conditions tended to include unusually long treatments (e.g., >100 sessions) (H2), and how the observed number of sessions was distributed across countries (H3).

Details

ISSN :
14230348 and 00333190
Volume :
89
Issue :
5
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Psychotherapy and psychosomatics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....fe6ef0404b7dd2fe462f8cf50336d104