Comparing the predictors of disengagement for trauma therapy (TF-CBT and EMDR) in an adult mental health service
Comparing the predictors of disengagement for trauma therapy (TF-CBT and EMDR) in an adult mental health service
In this retrospective service evaluation, the predictors of disengagement from trauma therapy are investigated, as previous research suggests that disengagement rates may be higher than other therapies Clients on the post-traumatic stress disorder treatment pathway received either eye movement desensitization and reprocessing (EMDR) or trauma-focused cognitive behavioral therapy (TF-CBT). Preexisting data from 105 cases at a National Health Service Adult Community Mental Health Team were collected, and disengagement rates were compared based on demographic therapy and Health of the Nation Outcome Scales scores to investigate the impact they have on disengagement rates. Results found a different proportion of those receiving EMDR disengaged (62.8%) than those who received TF-CBT (55.3%), though this difference was nonsignificant. There was a significant association between disengagement rates and depressed mood (77.8% in moderate to severe group vs. 51.2% in no to mild group). There was also a significant association between disengagement rates and living conditions (84.0% in minor to severe group vs. 53.7% in no problem group). No significant associations were found between disengagement and demographic variables (age, gender, and ethnicity) or
time spent waiting for intervention. The implications of these findings and practice recommendations are discussed.
disengagement, drop-out, eye movement desensitization and reprocessing, posttraumatic stress disorder, service evaluation, trauma-focused cognitive behavior therapy
216-227
Hayward, David
a4e8e02e-6d05-4ab1-b14c-3d0ad6273cad
Richardson, Thomas
f8d84122-b061-4322-a594-5ef2eb5cad0d
Beattie, David
6347c24b-5f97-4b9c-8432-8098707cd0fe
Bayliss, Paul
183f8006-377b-4467-ad5a-27a200b4f9fe
October 2023
Hayward, David
a4e8e02e-6d05-4ab1-b14c-3d0ad6273cad
Richardson, Thomas
f8d84122-b061-4322-a594-5ef2eb5cad0d
Beattie, David
6347c24b-5f97-4b9c-8432-8098707cd0fe
Bayliss, Paul
183f8006-377b-4467-ad5a-27a200b4f9fe
Hayward, David, Richardson, Thomas, Beattie, David and Bayliss, Paul
(2023)
Comparing the predictors of disengagement for trauma therapy (TF-CBT and EMDR) in an adult mental health service.
Journal of EMDR Practice and Research, 17 (4), .
(doi:10.1891/EMDR-2023-0004).
Abstract
In this retrospective service evaluation, the predictors of disengagement from trauma therapy are investigated, as previous research suggests that disengagement rates may be higher than other therapies Clients on the post-traumatic stress disorder treatment pathway received either eye movement desensitization and reprocessing (EMDR) or trauma-focused cognitive behavioral therapy (TF-CBT). Preexisting data from 105 cases at a National Health Service Adult Community Mental Health Team were collected, and disengagement rates were compared based on demographic therapy and Health of the Nation Outcome Scales scores to investigate the impact they have on disengagement rates. Results found a different proportion of those receiving EMDR disengaged (62.8%) than those who received TF-CBT (55.3%), though this difference was nonsignificant. There was a significant association between disengagement rates and depressed mood (77.8% in moderate to severe group vs. 51.2% in no to mild group). There was also a significant association between disengagement rates and living conditions (84.0% in minor to severe group vs. 53.7% in no problem group). No significant associations were found between disengagement and demographic variables (age, gender, and ethnicity) or
time spent waiting for intervention. The implications of these findings and practice recommendations are discussed.
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Published date: October 2023
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Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 EMDR International Association.
Keywords:
disengagement, drop-out, eye movement desensitization and reprocessing, posttraumatic stress disorder, service evaluation, trauma-focused cognitive behavior therapy
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Local EPrints ID: 484967
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/484967
ISSN: 1933-3196
PURE UUID: 145d4d50-bca4-4f3e-9f1e-3a0fb99e7133
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Date deposited: 27 Nov 2023 17:36
Last modified: 01 Nov 2024 05:01
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Author:
David Hayward
Author:
David Beattie
Author:
Paul Bayliss
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