Eleos Health, 117 Kendrick Street, Suite 300, Needham, MA, 02494, USA.
Center for m2Health, Palo Alto University, Palo Alto, CA, USA.
BMC Psychiatry. 2024 Feb 16;24(1):133. doi: 10.1186/s12888-024-05570-0.
While the positive impact of homework completion on symptom alleviation is well-established, the pivotal role of therapists in reviewing these assignments has been under-investigated. This study examined therapists' practice of assigning and reviewing action recommendations in therapy sessions, and how it correlates with patients' depression and anxiety outcomes.
We analyzed 2,444 therapy sessions from community-based behavioral health programs. Machine learning models and natural language processing techniques were deployed to discern action recommendations and their subsequent reviews. The extent of the review was quantified by measuring the proportion of session dialogues reviewing action recommendations, a metric we refer to as "review percentage". Using Generalized Estimating Equations modeling, we evaluated the correlation between this metric and changes in clients' depression and anxiety scores.
Our models achieved 76% precision in capturing action recommendations and 71.1% in reviewing them. Using these models, we found that therapists typically provided clients with one to eight action recommendations per session to engage in outside therapy. However, only half of the sessions included a review of previously assigned action recommendations. We identified a significant interaction between the initial depression score and the review percentage (p = 0.045). When adjusting for this relationship, the review percentage was positively and significantly associated with a reduction in depression score (p = 0.032). This suggests that more frequent review of action recommendations in therapy relates to greater improvement in depression symptoms. Further analyses highlighted this association for mild depression (p = 0.024), but not for anxiety or moderate to severe depression.
An observed positive association exists between therapists' review of previous sessions' action recommendations and improved treatment outcomes among clients with mild depression, highlighting the possible advantages of consistently revisiting therapeutic homework in real-world therapy settings. Results underscore the importance of developing effective strategies to help therapists maintain continuity between therapy sessions, potentially enhancing the impact of therapy.
虽然家庭作业完成对症状缓解的积极影响已得到充分证实,但治疗师在审查这些作业方面的关键作用尚未得到充分研究。本研究考察了治疗师在治疗会议中分配和审查行动建议的实践,以及其与患者抑郁和焦虑结果的相关性。
我们分析了来自社区行为健康计划的 2444 次治疗会议。使用机器学习模型和自然语言处理技术来识别行动建议及其随后的审查。通过测量审查会话对话中审查行动建议的比例(我们称之为“审查百分比”)来量化审查的程度。使用广义估计方程模型,我们评估了该指标与客户抑郁和焦虑评分变化之间的相关性。
我们的模型在捕获行动建议方面的准确率为 76%,在审查方面的准确率为 71.1%。使用这些模型,我们发现治疗师通常会在每次会议上为客户提供一到八项行动建议,以参与外部治疗。然而,只有一半的会议包括对之前分配的行动建议进行审查。我们发现初始抑郁评分和审查百分比之间存在显著的交互作用(p=0.045)。在调整这种关系后,审查百分比与抑郁评分的降低呈显著正相关(p=0.032)。这表明,在治疗中更频繁地审查行动建议与抑郁症状的改善程度更高有关。进一步的分析强调了这种与轻度抑郁的关联(p=0.024),但与焦虑或中度至重度抑郁无关。
治疗师对之前会议的行动建议的审查与轻度抑郁患者的治疗结果改善之间存在正相关关系,这突出了在现实治疗环境中持续回顾治疗性家庭作业可能带来的优势。研究结果强调了开发有效策略以帮助治疗师保持治疗之间连续性的重要性,这可能会增强治疗的效果。