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Content and attainment of individual treatment goals in CBT.

Anaïs BaurAnne TröskenBabette Renneberg
Published in: Psychotherapy research : journal of the Society for Psychotherapy Research (2023)
This study examined the attainment of individual treatment goals as an approach to measure treatment outcomes retrospectively in comparison to standardized self-report measures. In total, 189 outpatients defined 1-3 treatment goals ( N  = 455) using the Goal Attainment Scaling (GAS) at the beginning of cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) and indicated the degree of their individual goal attainment post-treatment. The goals were assigned to content-related goal types of the Bern Inventory of Treatment Goals (BIT-T). The extent of goal attainment was, on average, between 1 (goal halfway attained) and 2 (goal attained) ( M  = 1.43), regardless of goal content and diagnostic group. Goals of the goal type "problems and symptoms" were chosen most frequently and showed significantly higher goal attainment than "interpersonal" goals, thereby indicating that outpatients in CBT mainly want to work on treatment goals like coping with problems and symptoms. Additionally, standardized self-report measures (Brief Symptom Inventory, Beck Depression Inventory-II) were assessed, and associations with the GAS were calculated. They correlated significantly but moderately, thus indicating that the two concepts complement each other and should ideally be implemented together.
Keyphrases
  • mental health
  • physical activity
  • combination therapy
  • social support
  • room temperature
  • patient reported