Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-lj6df Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-17T21:01:49.311Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

When is enough enough? Structuring the organization of treatment to maximize patient choice and control

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 March 2009

Timothy A. Carey*
Affiliation:
Centre for Applied Psychology, University of Canberra, ACT, Australia
Margaret B. Spratt
Affiliation:
Department of Clinical Psychology, Stratheden Hospital, Fife, UK
*
*Author for correspondence: Dr T. A. Carey, Centre for Applied Psychology, University of Canberra, Canberra ACT 2601, Australia. (email: Tim.Carey@canberra.edu.au)

Abstract

The psychological treatment offered to clients is important. However, an equally important consideration may be the way the treatment is delivered. Reducing waiting lists and improving access to services are priorities for many health services. So is increasing patient control over their own health-care outcomes. While waiting times and access to services have typically been addressed by increasing the numbers of clinicians available, our work suggests that a strategy of providing patients with the ability to determine the frequency and duration of their treatment may be an option that is simpler, more effective, and financially more attractive. After describing policy and ethical guidelines as well as empirical and theoretical information, we provide data from our work in one GP practice about the improvements in waiting times and access to services that occurred when we adopted an approach that allowed patients rather than clinicians to decide how the organization of treatment would occur. There seem to be many benefits to this approach; however, it may also raise dilemmas for clinicians when patients' preferences differ from their own. Ultimately, these conundrums can only be reconciled by the individual clinicians based on their attitudes to mental health problems and service provision.

Type
Practice article
Copyright
Copyright © British Association for Behavioural and Cognitive Psychotherapies 2009

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Recommended follow-up reading

Carey, TA (2005). Can patients specify treatment parameters? Clinical Psychology and Psychotherapy: An International Journal of Theory and Practice 12, 326335.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Carey, TA (2006). Estimating treatment duration in primary care. Journal of Public Mental Health 5, 2328.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Carey, TA, Mullan, RJ (2007). Patients taking the lead: A naturalistic investigation of a patient led approach to treatment in primary care. Counselling Psychology Quarterly 20, 2740.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

References

BPS (2006). Code of ethics and conduct. Leicester: The British Psychological Society (http://www.bps.org.uk/document-download-area/document-download$.cfm?file_uuid=5084A882-1143-DFD0-7E6C-F1938A65C242&ext=pdf). Accessed 21 June 2008.Google Scholar
Carey, TA (2005). Can patients specify treatment parameters? Clinical Psychology and Psychotherapy: An International Journal of Theory and Practice 12, 326335.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Carey, TA (2006). Estimating treatment duration in primary care. Journal of Public Mental Health 5, 2328.Google Scholar
Carey, TA, Kemp, K (2007). Self-selecting first appointments: a replication and consideration of the implications for patient-centred care. Clinical Psychology Forum 178, 3336.Google Scholar
Carey, TA, Mullan, RJ (2007). Patients taking the lead: a naturalistic investigation of a patient led approach to treatment in primary care. Counselling Psychology Quarterly 20, 2740.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Carey, TA, Mullan, RJ (2008). Evaluating the Method of Levels. Counselling Psychology Quarterly 21, 110.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Carey, TA, Mullan, RJ, Carey, M (2007). Patient-led treatment: an idea whose time has come. Clinical Psychology Forum 177, 912.Google Scholar
Department of Health, Social Services, and Public Safety (2004). A healthier future: a twenty year vision for health and wellbeing in Northern Ireland 2005–2025 (http://www.dhsspsni.gov.uk/healthyfuture-main.pdf). Accessed June 2008.Google Scholar
Hansen, NB, Lambert, MJ, Forman, EM (2002). The psychotherapy dose-response effect and its implications for treatment delivery services. Clinical Psychology: Science & Practice 9, 329343.Google Scholar
Jacobsen, NS, Truax, P (1991). Clinical significance: a statistical approach to defining meaningful change in psychotherapy research. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology 59, 1219.Google Scholar
Kazdin, AE (1999). The meanings and measurement of clinical significance. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology 67, 332339.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Kazdin, AE (2001). Almost clinically significant (p < .10): Current measures may only approach clinical significance. Clinical Psychology: Science and Practice 8, 455462.Google Scholar
Keijsers, GPJ, Schaap, CPDR, Hoogduin, CAL (2000). The impact of interpersonal patient and therapist behavior on outcome in cognitive-behavior therapy: a review of empirical studies. Behavior Modification 24, 264297.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Lambert, MJ, Burlingame, GM, Umphress, V, Hansen, NB, Vermeersch, DA, Clouse, GC, Christopherson, C, Burlingame, GM (1996). The reliability and validity of the Outcome Questionnaire. Clinical Psychology and Psychotherapy 3, 249258.3.0.CO;2-S>CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lambert, MJ, Hansen, NB, Finch, AE (2001). Patient-focused research: using patient outcome data to enhance treatment effects. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology 69, 159172.Google Scholar
Lovibond, PF, Lovibond, SH (1995). The structure of negative emotional states: comparison of the Depression Anxiety Stress Scales (DASS) with the Beck Depression and Anxiety inventories. Behaviour Research and Therapy 33, 335343.Google Scholar
McGlinchey, JB, Atkins, DC, Jacobson, NS (2002). Clinical significance methods: which one to use and how useful are they? Behavior Therapy, 33, 529550.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mueller, M, Pekarik, G (2000). Treatment duration prediction: Client accuracy, and its relationship to dropout, outcome, and satisfaction. Psychotherapy 37, 117123.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
NHS (2008 a). About patient choice (http://www.nhs.uk/choices/Pages/Aboutpatientchoice.aspx). Accessed June 2008.Google Scholar
NHS (2008 b). NHS core principles (http://www.nhs.uk/aboutnhs/CorePrinciples/Pages/NHSCorePrinciples.aspx). Accessed June 2008.Google Scholar
NHS Wales (2006). A therapy strategy for Wales: the contribution of therapy services to transforming the delivery of health and social care in Wales (http://new.wales.gov.uk/dhss/publications/health/strategies/therapy/therapyenglishe.pdf?lang=en). Accessed June 2008.Google Scholar
Pekarik, G (1983). Improvement in clients who have given different reasons for dropping out of treatment. Journal of Clinical Psychology 39, 909913.Google Scholar
Pekarik, G, Wierzbicki, M (1986). The relationship between clients' expected and actual treatment duration. Psychotherapy 23, 532534.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Powers, WT (2005). Behavior: The Control of Perception. New Canaan, CT: Benchmark.Google Scholar
Robinson, LA, Berman, JS, Neimeyer, RA (1990). Psychotherapy for the treatment of depression: a comprehensive review of controlled outcome research. Psychological Bulletin 108, 3049.Google Scholar
Scottish Executive (2000). Our national health: a plan for action, a plan for change (http://www.scotland.gov.uk/library3/health/onh-00.asp). Accessed March 2007.Google Scholar
Scottish Executive (2003). Partnership for care: Scotland's Health White Paper (http://www.scotland.gov.uk/Publications/2003/02/16476/18734). Accessed March 2007.Google Scholar
Shapiro, DA, Barkham, M, Stiles, WB, Hardy, GE, Rees, A, Reynolds, S, Startup, M (2003). Time is of the essence: a selective review of the fall and rise of brief therapy research. Psychology and Psychotherapy: Theory, Research and Practice 76, 211235.Google Scholar
Talmon, M (1990). Single Session Therapy: Maximizing the Effect of the First (and often only) Therapeutic Encounter. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.Google Scholar
Wierzbicki, M, Pekarik, G (1993). A meta-analysis of psychotherapy dropout. Professional Psychology: Research and Practice 24, 190195.Google Scholar
Submit a response

Comments

No Comments have been published for this article.