Integrating Responsive Motivational Interviewing With Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy (CBT) for Generalized Anxiety Disorder: Direct and Indirect Effects on Interpersonal Outcomes
Responsively adding motivational interviewing (MI) to cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) for generalized anxiety disorder (GAD) has outperformed CBT alone on follow-up worry reduction (Westra, Constantino, & Antony, 2016), with this long-term effect on the cardinal feature of worry being mediate...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of psychotherapy integration 2021-03, Vol.31 (1), p.54-69 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Responsively adding motivational interviewing (MI) to cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) for generalized anxiety disorder (GAD) has outperformed CBT alone on follow-up worry reduction (Westra, Constantino, & Antony, 2016), with this long-term effect on the cardinal feature of worry being mediated by less patient midtreatment resistance in MI-CBT (Constantino, Westra, Antony, & Coyne, 2019). Insofar as GAD can also be marked by interpersonal problems of nonassertiveness and over accommodation, we tested these same direct and indirect effects on these diagnostically salient interpersonal outcomes. Eighty-five patients with GAD were randomly assigned to brief MI-CBT or CBT. Patients completed a measure of interpersonal problems throughout treatment and across 12-month follow-up. Coders rated patient resistance at a midtreatment session. As expected, and consistent with the previously tested worry outcome, structural equation models showed comparable reductions in the interpersonal problems across active-phase MI-CBT and CBT. Also as predicted, MI-CBT versus CBT promoted greater reduction in over accommodation over follow-up. For problematic nonassertiveness, the effect was directionally consistent, but only approached significance. Finally, as predicted, the treatment effect on both interpersonal problem levels at 12 months following treatment was mediated by less midtreatment resistance in MI-CBT versus CBT. Results support that the benefit of adding MI to CBT for GAD extends to long-term interpersonal changes, and they implicate resistance management as a candidate mechanism of this effect.
Integración de entrevistas motivacionales receptivas con terapia cognitivo-conductual (TCC) para el trastorno de ansiedad generalizada: efectos directos e indirectos sobre los resultados interpersonales.
La incorporación responsable de entrevistas motivacionales (MI) a la terapia cognitivo-conductual (TCC) para el trastorno de ansiedad generalizada (TAG) ha superado a la TCC sola en la reducción de preocupaciones de seguimiento (Westra, Constantino y Antony, 2016), con este efecto a largo plazo en la característica fundamental de la preocupación está mediada por una menor resistencia del paciente a mitad del tratamiento en MI-CBT (Constantino, Westra, Antony y Coyne, 2019). En la medida en que el TAG también puede estar marcado por problemas interpersonales de falta de asertividad y exceso de acomodación, probamos estos mismos efectos directos e indirectos en estos resul |
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ISSN: | 1053-0479 1573-3696 |
DOI: | 10.1037/int0000194 |