Personalized high-frequency monitoring of a process-oriented psychotherapeutic approach to seizure disorders: Treatment utilization and participants' feedback.
Rosa MichaelisFriedrich EdelhäuserYvonne HülsnerEugen TrinkaGünter SchiepekPublished in: Psychotherapy (Chicago, Ill.) (2022)
High-frequency monitoring of psychological variables has been recommended to monitor and manage psychotherapeutic processes. However, high-frequency monitoring might be regarded as burdensome for participating patients. This feasibility study applied the concept of high-frequency treatment monitoring in patients with seizures and psychiatric comorbidities in an outpatient neurology service. The treatment monitoring entailed the development of a personalized process questionnaire, daily online monitoring, and regular reflection of the current time series graphs. Participants' feedback on user-friendliness and usefulness of this treatment monitoring was evaluated quantitatively and qualitatively. Participants' compliance rates (CRs) of daily self-assessments after 6 months were correlated with their quantitative feedback on user-friendliness and usefulness and the number of scheduled treatment sessions during this time period. Twenty patients, 15 women/5 men, median age 48 years (range: 23-73 years), were recruited. The median number of scheduled sessions was 11 sessions (range: 6-22). Participants reported a high overall satisfaction with the user-friendliness and usefulness of treatment monitoring. No notable correlations could be found between CRs and quantitative feedback nor between CRs and the number of scheduled treatment sessions. Personalized high-frequency monitoring of psychological variables seems to be feasible to monitor and manage process-oriented psychotherapeutic care in patients with seizures and psychiatric comorbidities. The results support the user-friendliness and usefulness of high-frequency monitoring and suggest that high-frequency monitoring may be suitable for monitoring of low-frequent treatment sessions and patients with attendance issues. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved).