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Dresden PTSD treatment study: randomized controlled trial of motor vehicle accident survivors

Dresden PTSD treatment study: randomized controlled trial of motor vehicle accident survivors
Dresden PTSD treatment study: randomized controlled trial of motor vehicle accident survivors
Background: we translated, modified, and extended a cognitive behavioral treatment (CBT) protocol by Blanchard and Hickling (2003) for the purpose of treating survivors of MVA with full or subsyndromal posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) whose native language is German. The treatment manual included some additional elements, e. g. cognitive procedures, imaginal reliving, and facilitating of posttraumatic growth. The current study was conducted in order to test the efficacy of the modified manual by administering randomized controlled trial in which a CBT was compared to a wait-list control condition. Methods: forty-two motor vehicle accident survivors with chronic or severe subsyndromal posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) completed the treatment trial with two or three detailed assessments (pre, post, and 3-month follow-up). Results: CAPS-scores showed significantly greater improvement in the CBT condition as compared to the wait list condition (group x time interaction effect size d = 1.61). Intent-to-treat analysis supported the outcome (d = 1.34). Categorical diagnostic data indicated clinical recovery of 67% (post-treatment) and 76% (3 months FU) in the treatment group. Additionally, patients of the CBT condition showed significantly greater reductions in co-morbid major depression than the control condition. At follow-up the improvements were stable in the active treatment condition. Conclusion: the degree of improvement in our treatment group was comparable to that in previously reported treatment trials of PTSD with cognitive behavioral therapy
1471-244X
Maercker, Andreas
c8c1b9a1-07e0-4086-8c97-a3c259f33aa6
Zöllner, Tanja
c360ade9-d39c-4766-974c-dae3a30ed211
Menning, Hans
d19a3be6-d125-483a-8999-061be02f1e8b
Rabe, Sirko
4f72049c-7e14-4dc7-b0dd-f1111df18f91
Karl, Anke
7f091050-641c-4658-a247-785cfd194c3d
Maercker, Andreas
c8c1b9a1-07e0-4086-8c97-a3c259f33aa6
Zöllner, Tanja
c360ade9-d39c-4766-974c-dae3a30ed211
Menning, Hans
d19a3be6-d125-483a-8999-061be02f1e8b
Rabe, Sirko
4f72049c-7e14-4dc7-b0dd-f1111df18f91
Karl, Anke
7f091050-641c-4658-a247-785cfd194c3d

Maercker, Andreas, Zöllner, Tanja, Menning, Hans, Rabe, Sirko and Karl, Anke (2006) Dresden PTSD treatment study: randomized controlled trial of motor vehicle accident survivors. BMC Psychiatry, 6 (29). (doi:10.1186/1471-244X-6-29).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: we translated, modified, and extended a cognitive behavioral treatment (CBT) protocol by Blanchard and Hickling (2003) for the purpose of treating survivors of MVA with full or subsyndromal posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) whose native language is German. The treatment manual included some additional elements, e. g. cognitive procedures, imaginal reliving, and facilitating of posttraumatic growth. The current study was conducted in order to test the efficacy of the modified manual by administering randomized controlled trial in which a CBT was compared to a wait-list control condition. Methods: forty-two motor vehicle accident survivors with chronic or severe subsyndromal posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) completed the treatment trial with two or three detailed assessments (pre, post, and 3-month follow-up). Results: CAPS-scores showed significantly greater improvement in the CBT condition as compared to the wait list condition (group x time interaction effect size d = 1.61). Intent-to-treat analysis supported the outcome (d = 1.34). Categorical diagnostic data indicated clinical recovery of 67% (post-treatment) and 76% (3 months FU) in the treatment group. Additionally, patients of the CBT condition showed significantly greater reductions in co-morbid major depression than the control condition. At follow-up the improvements were stable in the active treatment condition. Conclusion: the degree of improvement in our treatment group was comparable to that in previously reported treatment trials of PTSD with cognitive behavioral therapy

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Published date: 2006

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 45028
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/45028
ISSN: 1471-244X
PURE UUID: 378450dc-6fb5-4a8c-b2ce-7fbce7051f49

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Date deposited: 23 Mar 2007
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 09:09

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Contributors

Author: Andreas Maercker
Author: Tanja Zöllner
Author: Hans Menning
Author: Sirko Rabe
Author: Anke Karl

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