Abstract
Unwanted events in psychotherapy can hinder treatment, yet clinicians overlook them and tend to attribute treatment stagnation mainly to patient-related factors. The unwanted events-adverse treatment reaction (UE-ATR) checklist was developed to encourage a more balanced reflection on treatment difficulties, but its effectiveness remains unclear. This study investigated whether the UE-ATR checklist enables clinicians to allocate treatment difficulties in a more nuanced way across various contributing factors. Clinicians and psychology students (N = 104) were randomly assigned to either use the UE-ATR (n = 59) or not (n = 45) while reviewing a case vignette of a patient who experienced unwanted events during therapy and treatment stagnation. They allocated responsibility for suboptimal treatment outcome across five factors: the patient, the therapist, the treatment method, the patient's pathology or other circumstances. Attribution was analysed using the Herfindahl-Hirschman index (HHI), where higher scores indicate a monocausal and lower scores reflect a multicausal view. No significant differences were found between the conditions. Although most users found the checklist clinically useful, this positive perception did not lead to a more balanced perspective on the causes of unwanted events. Although the UE-ATR checklist can support clinical reflection, additional training is necessary to maximize its effectiveness.
Original language | English |
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Article number | e70091 |
Number of pages | 6 |
Journal | Clinical Psychology & Psychotherapy |
Volume | 32 |
Issue number | 3 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - May 2025 |
Keywords
- UE-ATR checklist
- psychotherapy
- therapeutic side effects
- unwanted effects
- Humans
- Checklist
- Female
- Male
- Adult
- Psychotherapy/methods
- Mental Disorders/therapy psychology
- Treatment Outcome
- Treatment Failure
- Attitude of Health Personnel
- Young Adult
- Middle Aged