Abstract

BackgroundThe Counselling in Primary Care service (CIPC) is the first and only nationally available public counselling service in the Republic of Ireland. This study provides initial data for the effectiveness of short-term psychotherapy delivered in a primary care setting in Ireland for the first time.MethodA practice-based observational research approach was employed to examine outcome data from 2806 clients receiving therapy from 130 therapists spread over 150 primary care locations throughout Ireland. Pre-post outcomes were assessed using the CORE-OM and reliable and clinically significant change proportions. Binary logistic regression examined the effect of pre therapy symptom severity on the log odds of recovering. Six and 12 month follow up data from a subsample of 276 clients were also analysed using growth curve analysis.ResultsOf 14,156 referred clients, 5356 presented for assessment and 52.3% (N = 2806) consented to participate. Between assessment and post-therapy a large reduction in severity of symptoms was observed- Cohen’s d = 0.98. Furthermore, 47% of clients achieved recovery,a further 15.5% reliably improved, 2.7% reliably deteriorated and34.7% showed no reliable improvement. Higher initial severity was associated with less chance of recovering at post-therapy. Significant gains were maintained between assessment and12 months after therapy- Cohen’s d = 0.50.ConclusionsOutcomes for clients in the CIPC service compared favourably with large scale counselling and psychotherapy services in jurisdictions in the U.K., the U.S.A., Norway and Sweden. This study expands the international primary care psychotherapy research base to include the entire Republic of Ireland jurisdiction.

Highlights

  • The Counselling in Primary Care service (CIPC) is the first and only nationally available public counselling service in the Republic of Ireland

  • The CORE-OM questionnaire was the primary outcome measure for this study that sought to assess the effectiveness of the CIPC service in relation to other services utilising the CORE-OM, or similar measures of psychological distress

  • For every additional one unit increase in pre counselling CORE-OM scores, the log odds of recovery decreased by a factor of 0.53.These results indicate that initial severity was an indicator of outcome whereby those clients starting counselling with higher levels of overall distress were associated with less chance of recovering

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Summary

Introduction

The Counselling in Primary Care service (CIPC) is the first and only nationally available public counselling service in the Republic of Ireland. This study provides initial data for the effectiveness of short-term psychotherapy delivered in a primary care setting in Ireland for the first time. By 2001, in line with other national health agencies internationally, the Irish government had acknowledged the significant body of international evidence for the benefits of an integrated approach to the provision of psychological. Brand et al BMC Psychiatry (2021) 21:227 of medication-only approaches to the treatment of mental health problems [2, 3]

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