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Patients’ and clinicians’ views of the psychological components of tinnitus treatment that could inform audiologists’ usual care: A Delphi survey

Patients’ and clinicians’ views of the psychological components of tinnitus treatment that could inform audiologists’ usual care: A Delphi survey
Patients’ and clinicians’ views of the psychological components of tinnitus treatment that could inform audiologists’ usual care: A Delphi survey

Objectives: The aim of this study was to determine which components of psychological therapies are most important and appropriate to inform audiologists’ usual care for people with tinnitus. Design: A 39-member panel of patients, audiologists, hearing therapists, and psychologists completed a three-round Delphi survey to reach consensus on essential components of audiologist-delivered psychologically informed care for tinnitus. Results: Consensus (≥80% agreement) was reached on including 76 of 160 components. No components reached consensus for exclusion. The components reaching consensus were predominantly common therapeutic skills such as Socratic questioning and active listening, rather than specific techniques, for example, graded exposure therapy or cognitive restructuring. Consensus on educational components to include largely concerned psychological models of tinnitus rather than neurophysiological information. Conclusions: The results of this Delphi survey provide a tool to develop audiologists’ usual tinnitus care using components that both patients and clinicians agree are important and appropriate to be delivered by an audiologist for adults with tinnitus-related distress. Research is now necessary to test the added effects of these components when delivered by audiologists.

0196-0202
367-377
Thompson, Dean M.
b9814c99-6ea7-4e2c-abf1-edc94b69d985
Taylor, John
aaab160b-ed44-4f7c-9259-6eb31bd65e6b
Hall, Deborah A.
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Walker, Dawn Marie
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McMurran, Mary
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Casey, Amanda
d5808f8f-c6e4-40f7-96ba-1fbba2cda307
Stockdale, David
dd88fe75-f217-4d5c-8949-234b031bbe09
Featherstone, Debbie
fe0fa68e-2dad-43af-a349-eaa13310747b
Hoare, Derek J.
69d0a4d9-8bd2-4b5e-ac32-605b13de8980
Thompson, Dean M.
b9814c99-6ea7-4e2c-abf1-edc94b69d985
Taylor, John
aaab160b-ed44-4f7c-9259-6eb31bd65e6b
Hall, Deborah A.
917cd3f4-0242-4dc4-9473-4a2097c1ba06
Walker, Dawn Marie
5d4c78b7-4411-493e-8844-b64efc72a1e8
McMurran, Mary
4dea6f09-8b51-46a2-a3de-679617979804
Casey, Amanda
d5808f8f-c6e4-40f7-96ba-1fbba2cda307
Stockdale, David
dd88fe75-f217-4d5c-8949-234b031bbe09
Featherstone, Debbie
fe0fa68e-2dad-43af-a349-eaa13310747b
Hoare, Derek J.
69d0a4d9-8bd2-4b5e-ac32-605b13de8980

Thompson, Dean M., Taylor, John, Hall, Deborah A., Walker, Dawn Marie, McMurran, Mary, Casey, Amanda, Stockdale, David, Featherstone, Debbie and Hoare, Derek J. (2018) Patients’ and clinicians’ views of the psychological components of tinnitus treatment that could inform audiologists’ usual care: A Delphi survey. Ear and Hearing, 367-377. (doi:10.1097/AUD.0000000000000492).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Objectives: The aim of this study was to determine which components of psychological therapies are most important and appropriate to inform audiologists’ usual care for people with tinnitus. Design: A 39-member panel of patients, audiologists, hearing therapists, and psychologists completed a three-round Delphi survey to reach consensus on essential components of audiologist-delivered psychologically informed care for tinnitus. Results: Consensus (≥80% agreement) was reached on including 76 of 160 components. No components reached consensus for exclusion. The components reaching consensus were predominantly common therapeutic skills such as Socratic questioning and active listening, rather than specific techniques, for example, graded exposure therapy or cognitive restructuring. Consensus on educational components to include largely concerned psychological models of tinnitus rather than neurophysiological information. Conclusions: The results of this Delphi survey provide a tool to develop audiologists’ usual tinnitus care using components that both patients and clinicians agree are important and appropriate to be delivered by an audiologist for adults with tinnitus-related distress. Research is now necessary to test the added effects of these components when delivered by audiologists.

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Accepted/In Press date: 18 July 2017
e-pub ahead of print date: 24 January 2018
Published date: March 2018

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 419416
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/419416
ISSN: 0196-0202
PURE UUID: 30eb0d1e-34f2-4196-904a-4993a1eeeb8e
ORCID for Dawn Marie Walker: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-2135-1363

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Date deposited: 12 Apr 2018 16:30
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 04:20

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Contributors

Author: Dean M. Thompson
Author: John Taylor
Author: Deborah A. Hall
Author: Dawn Marie Walker ORCID iD
Author: Mary McMurran
Author: Amanda Casey
Author: David Stockdale
Author: Debbie Featherstone
Author: Derek J. Hoare

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