Influence of Life Events on Outcome in Psychotherapy

The life events occurring to 64 outpatients participating in a psychotherapy outcome study were assessed for the 6 months before intake, during therapy itself, and during a follow-up period that averaged 7.2 months. Events were identified using a combined checklist and interview methodology. The imp...

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Veröffentlicht in:The journal of nervous and mental disease 1984-08, Vol.172 (8), p.468-474
Hauptverfasser: PILKONIS, PAUL A, IMBER, STANLEY D, RUBINSKY, PETER
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The life events occurring to 64 outpatients participating in a psychotherapy outcome study were assessed for the 6 months before intake, during therapy itself, and during a follow-up period that averaged 7.2 months. Events were identified using a combined checklist and interview methodology. The impact of events was assessed by examining their predictive validity above and beyond that attributable to a set of demographic and clinical variables (sex, age, socioeconomic status, chronicity, and history of prior treatment). The major findings were thata) life events did have a significant influence, but only at intake and termination and not at follow-up; b) “negative” events were more useful than the total number of events in predicting status; and c) when life events did have predictive power, the average increase in explained variance attributable to events was 13.4 per cent.
ISSN:0022-3018
1539-736X
DOI:10.1097/00005053-198408000-00005