Department of Internal Medicine, Section on Gerontology and Geriatric Medicine, Wake Forest School of Medicine, United States.
Department of Neurology, Wake Forest School of Medicine, United States.
J Psychiatr Res. 2021 Jun;138:311-318. doi: 10.1016/j.jpsychires.2021.03.055. Epub 2021 Mar 30.
The purpose of this study was to examine factors that influence a person's choice of cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) or yoga, the stability of these preferences, and the impact of preference on engagement and process measures. We conducted a randomized preference trial of CBT and yoga in 500 adults ≥60 years with symptoms of worry. Participants reported their intervention preference, strength of preference, and factors impacting preference. Engagement in the intervention (session completion and dropout rates) was assessed. Process measures included satisfaction with the intervention, therapeutic alliance, and intervention expectancy. Neither intervention preference (48% and 52% chose CBT and yoga, respectively) nor strength of preference differed significantly between the two preference trial groups. Intervention expectancies at baseline among those in the preference trial were approximately 4.5 units (40-point scale) higher for their preferred intervention (p < .0001 within each group). A principal component analysis of factors influencing preference identified three constructs. Using logistic regression, components focused on attitudes about CBT or yoga were predictive of ultimate preference (odds ratio = 11.5, 95% C.I.6.3-21.0 per 1SD difference in component 1 for choosing CBT; odds ratio = 7.8, 95% CI4.3-13.9 per 1SD difference in component 2 for choosing yoga). There were no significant differences between the randomized and preference trials on intervention adherence, completion of assessments, intervention satisfaction, or working alliance. Receiving a preferred treatment had no significant effects on intervention outcomes through participant engagement or process measures. When options are limited, providers may have confidence in offering the most readily available non-pharmacological treatments.
这项研究的目的是探讨影响个体选择认知行为疗法(CBT)或瑜伽的因素、这些偏好的稳定性,以及偏好对参与度和进程测量的影响。我们对 500 名 60 岁以上、有担忧症状的成年人进行了 CBT 和瑜伽的随机偏好试验。参与者报告了他们的干预偏好、偏好强度以及影响偏好的因素。干预的参与度(疗程完成率和退出率)进行了评估。进程测量包括对干预的满意度、治疗联盟和干预期望。两种偏好试验组之间,干预偏好(分别有 48%和 52%的人选择 CBT 和瑜伽)和偏好强度都没有显著差异。在偏好试验中,那些在基线时对干预期望较高的人,他们对首选干预的期望大约高出 4.5 个单位(40 分制)(每组内 p<.0001)。对影响偏好的因素进行主成分分析,确定了三个结构。使用逻辑回归,对 CBT 或瑜伽的态度的成分对最终偏好具有预测性(选择 CBT 的情况下,成分 1 每相差 1 个标准差,优势比为 11.5,95%置信区间为 6.3-21.0;选择瑜伽的情况下,成分 2 每相差 1 个标准差,优势比为 7.8,95%置信区间为 4.3-13.9)。在干预依从性、评估完成情况、干预满意度或工作联盟方面,随机试验和偏好试验之间没有显著差异。接受首选治疗对通过参与度或进程测量的干预结果没有显著影响。当选择有限时,提供者可能有信心提供最容易获得的非药物治疗。