Emotional crisis in a naturalistic context: characterizing outpatient profiles and treatment effectiveness

Abstract Background Crisis happens daily yet its understanding is often limited, even in the field of psychiatry. Indeed, a challenge is to assess the potential for change of patients so as to offer appropriate therapeutic interventions and enhance treatment program efficacy. This naturalistic study...

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Main Authors: Adriano Zanello, Laurent Berthoud, Jean-Pierre Bacchetta
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2017-04-01
Series:BMC Psychiatry
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12888-017-1293-3
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spelling doaj-944978535f23474c96f6006980b634652020-11-25T00:42:35ZengBMCBMC Psychiatry1471-244X2017-04-0117111210.1186/s12888-017-1293-3Emotional crisis in a naturalistic context: characterizing outpatient profiles and treatment effectivenessAdriano Zanello0Laurent Berthoud1Jean-Pierre Bacchetta2Department of Mental Health and Psychiatry, University Hospitals of GenevaDepartment of Psychiatry, University of LausanneDepartment of Mental Health and Psychiatry, University Hospitals of GenevaAbstract Background Crisis happens daily yet its understanding is often limited, even in the field of psychiatry. Indeed, a challenge is to assess the potential for change of patients so as to offer appropriate therapeutic interventions and enhance treatment program efficacy. This naturalistic study aimed to identify the socio-demographical characteristics and clinical profiles at admission of patients referred to a specialized Crisis Intervention Center (CIC) and to examine the effectiveness of the intervention. Method The sample was composed of 352 adult outpatients recruited among the referrals to the CIC. Assessment completed at admission and at discharge examined psychiatric symptoms, defense mechanisms, recovery styles and global functioning. The crisis intervention consisted in a psychodynamically oriented multimodal approach associated with medication. Results Regarding the clinical profiles at intake, patients were middle-aged (M = 38.56, SD = 10.91), with a higher proportion of women (62.22%). They were addressed to the CIC because they had attempted to commit suicide or had suicidal ideation or presented depressed mood related to interpersonal difficulties. No statistical differences were found between patients dropping out (n = 215) and those attending the crisis intervention (n = 137). Crisis intervention demonstrated a beneficial effect (p < 0.01) on almost all variables, with Effect Sizes (ES) ranging from small to large (0.12 < ES < 0.75; median = 0.49). However, the Reliable Change Index indicated that most of the issues fall into the undetermined category (range 41.46 to 96.35%; median = 66.20%). Conclusions This study establishes the profile of patients referred to the CIC and shows that more than half of the patients dropped out from the crisis intervention before completion. Our findings suggest that people presenting an emotional crisis benefit from crisis intervention. However, given methodological constraints, these results need to be considered with caution. Moreover, the clinical significance of the improvements is not confirmed. Thus, the effectiveness of crisis intervention in naturalistic context is not fully determined and should be more rigorously studied in future research.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12888-017-1293-3Crisis interventionBrief psychiatric rating scaleDefense mechanismsRecovery styleCommunity mental health servicesTreatment effectiveness
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Adriano Zanello
Laurent Berthoud
Jean-Pierre Bacchetta
spellingShingle Adriano Zanello
Laurent Berthoud
Jean-Pierre Bacchetta
Emotional crisis in a naturalistic context: characterizing outpatient profiles and treatment effectiveness
BMC Psychiatry
Crisis intervention
Brief psychiatric rating scale
Defense mechanisms
Recovery style
Community mental health services
Treatment effectiveness
author_facet Adriano Zanello
Laurent Berthoud
Jean-Pierre Bacchetta
author_sort Adriano Zanello
title Emotional crisis in a naturalistic context: characterizing outpatient profiles and treatment effectiveness
title_short Emotional crisis in a naturalistic context: characterizing outpatient profiles and treatment effectiveness
title_full Emotional crisis in a naturalistic context: characterizing outpatient profiles and treatment effectiveness
title_fullStr Emotional crisis in a naturalistic context: characterizing outpatient profiles and treatment effectiveness
title_full_unstemmed Emotional crisis in a naturalistic context: characterizing outpatient profiles and treatment effectiveness
title_sort emotional crisis in a naturalistic context: characterizing outpatient profiles and treatment effectiveness
publisher BMC
series BMC Psychiatry
issn 1471-244X
publishDate 2017-04-01
description Abstract Background Crisis happens daily yet its understanding is often limited, even in the field of psychiatry. Indeed, a challenge is to assess the potential for change of patients so as to offer appropriate therapeutic interventions and enhance treatment program efficacy. This naturalistic study aimed to identify the socio-demographical characteristics and clinical profiles at admission of patients referred to a specialized Crisis Intervention Center (CIC) and to examine the effectiveness of the intervention. Method The sample was composed of 352 adult outpatients recruited among the referrals to the CIC. Assessment completed at admission and at discharge examined psychiatric symptoms, defense mechanisms, recovery styles and global functioning. The crisis intervention consisted in a psychodynamically oriented multimodal approach associated with medication. Results Regarding the clinical profiles at intake, patients were middle-aged (M = 38.56, SD = 10.91), with a higher proportion of women (62.22%). They were addressed to the CIC because they had attempted to commit suicide or had suicidal ideation or presented depressed mood related to interpersonal difficulties. No statistical differences were found between patients dropping out (n = 215) and those attending the crisis intervention (n = 137). Crisis intervention demonstrated a beneficial effect (p < 0.01) on almost all variables, with Effect Sizes (ES) ranging from small to large (0.12 < ES < 0.75; median = 0.49). However, the Reliable Change Index indicated that most of the issues fall into the undetermined category (range 41.46 to 96.35%; median = 66.20%). Conclusions This study establishes the profile of patients referred to the CIC and shows that more than half of the patients dropped out from the crisis intervention before completion. Our findings suggest that people presenting an emotional crisis benefit from crisis intervention. However, given methodological constraints, these results need to be considered with caution. Moreover, the clinical significance of the improvements is not confirmed. Thus, the effectiveness of crisis intervention in naturalistic context is not fully determined and should be more rigorously studied in future research.
topic Crisis intervention
Brief psychiatric rating scale
Defense mechanisms
Recovery style
Community mental health services
Treatment effectiveness
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12888-017-1293-3
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