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Studies on treatment effects of psychodrama psychotherapy. Speaker. Michael Wieser, assistant prof. Dr . University of Klagenfurt. Bologna process coordinator Department of psychology. Austria/Europe. Contents. Terms Starting point Aim Sample characteristics Method of description
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Speaker Michael Wieser, assistant prof. Dr. University of Klagenfurt. Bologna process coordinator Department of psychology. Austria/Europe.
Contents • Terms • Starting point • Aim • Sample characteristics • Method of description • Results • Summary • Conclusion
Terms • Psychodrama as psychotherapy is based on theories of spontaneity, creativity and action. • ICD-10: International Classification of Diseases, Version 10 of the WHO, chapter F00-99 for mental and behavioural disorders. • Meta-analysis: existing studies in treatment effectiveness are systematically compared.
Starting point • Accredited by the government and social insurance systems in Austria (Ottomeyer & Wieser, 1996), in Hungary (Pintér, 2001), and by the European Association of Psychotherapy (EAP; Wieser, Fontaine, Tauvon & Teszary, 2004). • In Germany there is documentation, (Burmeister, Leutz, & Diebels, n.d.) but there are problems in matching the mainstream standards in evidence-based psychotherapy.
Starting point • The same with the meta-analysis developed by Grawe, Donati & Bernauer (1994) in Switzerland; preliminary acceptance by Swiss Charta of Psychotherapy • Meta-analyses conducted outside German-speaking countries (Kipper, 1978; Schramski, & Harvey, 1983; Kellermann, 1987; Greenberg, Elliot, & Lietaer, 1994; Kipper & Ritchie, 2003; Elliott, Greenberg & Lietaer, 2004) point to problems with research design.
Aim • The aim of this presentation is to explore the kind of statistical evidence which researchers have for the effectiveness of psychodrama psychotherapy.
Sample characteristics • Existing studies on the effectiveness of psychodrama psychotherapy provided in the literature • Database: PsycINFO, PsyNDEX • English and German • several decades
Sample characteristics • Age: children, youths, adults, elderly patients • Type of mental and behavioural disorders: acute to chronic • Treatment program: in- and outpatients, prisoners • Setting: individual, couple, family, group • Length of treatment: one session, weekend,marathon, long-term
Sample characteristics • Comparative studies: psychodrama psychotherapy with other psychotherapeutic methods or pharmaceutical therapy • Outcome studies • Process research • Cost efficiency analyses are unknown
Sample characteristics • Measuring instruments: none (at least systematic self report, sociometry) to high standard tools • Drop out rate: all, should be noticed and reflected • Most of the patients must have a diagnosis (ICD-10) • Mostly psychodrama psychotherapy, not self experience • Manualized psychotherapy: mostly not • Publication: all kind • Sixty one studies included: Thirteen are randomised clinical trials, sixteen are controlled studies, thirty-two are naturalistic studies.
Method of description • Classification of the studies: • Randomised clinical trial: two groups of patients are chosen at random. One group is given psychotherapeutic treatment, the other, for example, has to wait. • Controlled study: psychotherapy group is compared with a non-treated group. • Naturalistic study: normal psychotherapeutic practice, single case study, systematic, and controlled by qualitative and/or quantitative methods
Method of description • Mostly includes “pre- and post” measures, partly follow-up • Effect size: not all necessary information is available • Statistical significant results: * = p<0.05 ** = p<0.01 *** = p<0.001 (permille) ****= p<0.0001 probability of error in percent
Results: F00-F09 • Organic, including symptomatic, mental disorders (ICD-10 F00-F09) To date, no studies have been reviewed.
Results: F10-F19 • Mental and behavioural disorders due to psychoactive substance abuse (ICD-10 F10-F19) Five studies report positive results for adults and two of them also for youths.
Results: F20-F29 • Schizophrenia, schizotypal and delusional disorders (ICD-10 F20 - F29) Seven of eight studies have good results even with chronic schizophrenics and people with delusions who are in short term psychodrama psychotherapy.
Results: F30-F39 • Mood (affective) disorders(ICD-10F30-F39) Three studies with good results have been reported in this field
Results: F40-F48 • Neurotic, stress-related and somatoform disorders(ICD-10F40 - F48) In a total of twelve studies, more positive than negative results are reported.
Results: F50-F59 • Behavioural syndromes associated with physiological disturbances and physical factors(ICD-10F50 - F59) To date, no studies have been reviewed.
Results: F60-F69 • Disorders of adult personality and behaviour(ICD-10F60-F69) To date, no studies have been reviewed.
Results: F70-F79 • Mental retardation(ICD-10F70-F79) Three studies report positive results but are more a kind of social pedagogical psychodrama.
Results: F80-F89 • Disorders of psychological development (ICD-10 F80-F89) To date, no studies have been reviewed.
Results: F90-F98 • Behavioural emotional disorders with onset usually occurring in childhood or adolescence(ICD-10F90-F98) Two studies report positive results with techniques related to psychodrama psychotherapy.