Department of Developmental Psychology, University of Groningen, Groningen, the Netherlands; Interdisciplinary Center Psychopathology and Emotion Regulation, University Medical Center Groningen, Groningen, the Netherlands.
School of Public Health, The University of Queensland, Herston, QLD 4006, Australia; Queensland Centre for Mental Health Research, The Park Centre for Mental Health, QLD 4072, Australia.
J Affect Disord. 2021 Jun 1;288:199-209. doi: 10.1016/j.jad.2021.04.001. Epub 2021 Apr 20.
Although randomized trials show that specific phobia treatments can be effective, it is unclear whether patients experience treatment as helpful in clinical practice. We investigated this issue by assessing perceived treatment helpfulness for specific phobia in a cross-national epidemiological survey.
Cross-sectional population-based WHO World Mental Health (WMH) surveys in 24 countries (n=112,507) assessed lifetime specific phobia. Respondents who met lifetime criteria were asked whether they ever received treatment they considered helpful and the number of professionals seen up to the time of receiving helpful treatment. Discrete-event survival analysis was used to calculate conditional-cumulative probabilities of obtaining helpful treatment across number of professionals seen and of persisting in help-seeking after prior unhelpful treatment.
23.0% of respondents reported receiving helpful treatment from the first professional seen, whereas cumulative probability of receiving helpful treatment was 85.7% after seeing up to 9 professionals. However, only 14.7% of patients persisted in seeing up to 9 professionals, resulting in the proportion of patients ever receiving helpful treatment (47.5%) being much lower than it could have been with persistence in help-seeking. Few predictors were found either of perceived helpfulness or of persistence in help-seeking after earlier unhelpful treatments.
Retrospective recall and lack of information about either types of treatments received or objective symptomatic improvements limit results.
Despite these limitations, results suggest that helpfulness of specific phobia treatment could be increased, perhaps substantially, by increasing patient persistence in help-seeking after earlier unhelpful treatments. Improved understanding is needed of barriers to help-seeking persistence.
尽管随机对照试验表明特定恐惧症的治疗可能有效,但在临床实践中,患者是否认为治疗有帮助尚不清楚。我们通过在跨国流行病学调查中评估特定恐惧症治疗的可感知效果来研究这个问题。
在 24 个国家进行的横断面基于人群的世界卫生组织(WHO)世界心理健康调查(WMH)评估了终身特定恐惧症。符合终身标准的受访者被问及他们是否曾接受过他们认为有帮助的治疗,以及在接受有帮助的治疗之前看过多少专业人员。离散事件生存分析用于计算在看到的专业人员数量上获得有帮助的治疗的条件累积概率,以及在先前无帮助的治疗后继续寻求帮助的概率。
23.0%的受访者报告从首次就诊的专业人员那里获得了有帮助的治疗,而在看到多达 9 名专业人员后,获得有帮助的治疗的累积概率为 85.7%。然而,只有 14.7%的患者坚持看到多达 9 名专业人员,这导致接受过有帮助的治疗的患者比例(47.5%)远低于坚持寻求帮助的情况下可能达到的比例。很少有预测因素可以预测对治疗的可感知效果或在先前无帮助的治疗后继续寻求治疗的可能性。
回顾性回忆以及缺乏关于所接受的治疗类型或客观症状改善的信息限制了结果。
尽管存在这些局限性,但结果表明,通过增加患者在先前无帮助的治疗后继续寻求治疗的坚持度,可以显著提高特定恐惧症治疗的有效性。需要更好地了解继续寻求治疗的障碍。