Abstract

In psychotherapy research, the measurement of treatment processes and outcome are predominantly based on self-reports. However, given new technological developments, other potential sources can be considered to improve measurements. In a feasibility study, we examined whether Ecological Momentary Assessments (EMA) using digital phenotyping (stress level) can be a valuable tool to investigate change processes during cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT). Seven outpatients undergoing psychological treatment were assessed using EMA. Continuous stress levels (heart rate variability) were assessed via fitness trackers (Garmin) every 3 min over a 2-week time period (6,720 measurements per patient). Time-varying change point autoregressive (TVCP-AR) models were employed to detect both gradual and abrupt changes in stress levels. Results for seven case examples indicate differential patterns of change processes in stress. More precisely, inertia of stress level changed gradually over time in one of the participants, whereas the other participants showed both gradual and abrupt changes. This feasibility study demonstrates that intensive longitudinal assessments enriched by digitally assessed stress levels have the potential to investigate intra- and interindividual differences in treatment change processes and their relations to treatment outcome. Further, implementation issues and implications for future research and developments using digital phenotyping are discussed.

Highlights

  • The effectiveness of psychotherapy for the treatment of mental disorders has already been demonstrated in numerous meta-analyses, with outcomes comparable to and in some cases more durable than pharmacotherapy [e.g., [1,2,3]]

  • Autoregressive effects of stress level are shown for each patient and change points (CPs) are marked by vertical lines

  • The present feasibility study investigated whether individual differences of change patterns over time in digitally assessed stress rhythm can be detected using Time-varying change point autoregressive (TVCP-AR) models

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The effectiveness of psychotherapy for the treatment of mental disorders has already been demonstrated in numerous meta-analyses, with outcomes comparable to and in some cases more durable than pharmacotherapy [e.g., [1,2,3]]. About two thirds of all patients benefit from psychological treatments, yet some patients do not and 5–10% of patients even show deterioration [4]. A significant number of patients (ranging from 18.5 to 46.5%) will experience a recurrence of their symptoms, even if they initially responded to treatment [5]. These findings underline the urgency of improving psychological treatments, including cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT)

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call