Effectiveness of short-term inpatient psychotherapy based on transactional analysis with patients with personality disorders: a matched control study using propensity score

Authors
  • M. Soons
  • A.M.M.A. Meerman
  • U.M. Ziegler
  • B.V. Rossum
  • H. Andrea
  • T. Stijnen
  • P.M.G. Emmelkamp
  • J.J.V. Busschbach
Publication date 2015
Journal Journal of Personality Disorders
Volume | Issue number 29 | 5
Pages (from-to) 663-683
Organisations
  • Faculty of Social and Behavioural Sciences (FMG) - Psychology Research Institute (PsyRes)
Abstract
Controlled studies on the effectiveness of inpatient psychotherapy with patients with personality disorders (PD) are rare. This study aims to compare 3-month short-term inpatient psychotherapy based on transactional analysis (STIP-TA) with other psychotherapies (OP) up to 36-month follow-up. PD patients treated with STIP-TA were matched with OP patients using the propensity score. The primary outcome measure was general psychiatric symptomatology; secondary outcomes were psychosocial functioning and quality of life. In 67 pairs of patients, both STIP-TA and OP showed large symptomatic and functional improvements. However, STIP-TA patients showed more symptomatic improvement at all time points compared to OP patients. At 36 months, 68% of STIP-TA patients were symptomatically recovered compared to 48% of OP patients. STIP-TA outperformed OP in terms of improvements in general psychiatric symptomatology and quality of life. Superiority of STIP-TA was most pronounced at 12-month follow-up, but remained intact over the course of the 3-year follow-up.
Document type Article
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1521/pedi_2014_28_166
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