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1.
Psychother Res ; 34(4): 461-474, 2024 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37695995

ABSTRACT

Objective: The Systemic Therapy Inventory of Change (STIC) is a systemic measurement feedback system that provides therapists with feedback regarding the multidimensional clinical change in individual, couple, and family therapy. The STIC Intersession scales include Individual Problems and Strengths (IPS), Relationship with Partner (RWP), Family/Household (FH), and Child Problems and Strengths (CPS). They are administered to clients before each therapy session. The purpose of the current study is to investigate the STIC Intersession scales' sensitivity to change, the ability to detect reliable and valid changes that occur after an intervention. Method: Participants (N = 583) who voluntarily received individual, couple, or family therapy services in a randomized clinical trial attended the study. Results: By comparing the changes in pre-therapy and post-therapy scores of the STIC Intersession scales with those of the corresponding reference measures, the external sensitivity to change of the STIC Intersession scales was supported. The IPS Intersession scale showed greater change than the Beck Anxiety Inventory. However, no evidence supported the discriminant validity of CPS's change scores. Conclusion: Thus, the STIC Intersession IPS, RWP, and FH can be validly used to assess multi-systemic changes in both research and clinical work.


Subject(s)
Family Therapy , Humans , Family Therapy/methods , Feedback , Child
2.
Fam Process ; 59(1): 36-51, 2020 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31497883

ABSTRACT

Routine Outcome Monitoring (ROM) is recommended as a psychotherapy procedure to serve as clinical feedback in order to improve client treatment outcomes. ROM can work as a warning signal to the therapist if the client shows signs of no change or deterioration. This study has investigated whether any difference in outcome could be detected between those clients in couple and family therapy who used the Systemic Therapy Inventory of Change (STIC) feedback system (ROM condition) versus those who were offered treatment without the use of STIC ("treatment as usual" or TAU condition). A sample of 328 adults seeking couple and family therapy in Norway was randomly assigned to ROM versus TAU conditions. Outcome measures were The Outcome Questionnaire-45 and The Revised Dyadic Adjustment Scale. The results demonstrated no significant differences in outcomes between the ROM and TAU. Possible explanations of this result related to design and implementation issues are discussed.


Subject(s)
Couples Therapy/methods , Family Therapy/methods , Outcome Assessment, Health Care/methods , Transtheoretical Model , Adult , Child , Feedback, Psychological , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Norway , Surveys and Questionnaires , Treatment Outcome
3.
J Sex Marital Ther ; 46(3): 296-302, 2020.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31661426

ABSTRACT

The purpose of this study was to examine the covarying relationship between commitment and sexual satisfaction in committed relationships throughout the course of couple therapy. A sample of 366 heterosexual couples completed questionnaires regarding sexual satisfaction and commitment at each of the first five sessions of couple therapy. Cross-lagged panel analyses revealed that, between the first and second therapy sessions, there was a bidirectional relationship between commitment and sexual satisfaction, with each variable at the first session predicting the other at the second session. In addition, sexual satisfaction at the second session predicted commitment at the third session.


Subject(s)
Couples Therapy , Interpersonal Relations , Orgasm , Sexual Behavior/psychology , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Midwestern United States , Self Report , Young Adult
4.
Psychol Assess ; 31(9): 1107-1117, 2019 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31219281

ABSTRACT

The Systemic Therapy Inventory of Change (STIC) is a multisystemic and multidimensional feedback system that provides therapists feedback about systemic domains of client change in individual, couple, and family therapy over time. The goal of the present study is to investigate the sensitivity to change of the scores of the STIC Initial Scales. In total, 583 clients who voluntarily sought individual, couple, or family therapy services and participated in a randomized controlled trial study were included in the study. Their pre- and posttherapy responses to the STIC Initial measures and corresponding validation measures for individual functioning, couple relationship, child adjustment, and family functioning were compared. The results support the sensitivity to change of the scores of the four STIC Initial Scales investigated: Individual Problems and Strengths (IPS), Relationship with Partner (RWP), Family/Household (FH), and Child Problems and Strengths (CPS). Of particular note, the IPS demonstrated even greater change over time than the BDI-II, BAI, and OQ-45. The discriminant validity of measuring change with the CPS was not supported. Thus, the STIC Initial IPS, RWP, and FH can be usefully employed to measure multisystemic changes in both research and clinical work. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2019 APA, all rights reserved).


Subject(s)
Outcome Assessment, Health Care/methods , Psychotherapy , Adult , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Couples Therapy , Family Therapy , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Models, Statistical , Reproducibility of Results , Sensitivity and Specificity , Time Factors
5.
J Fam Psychol ; 29(5): 657-66, 2015 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26376428

ABSTRACT

This study, a naturalistic investigation of the process of change in relationship adjustment and individual functioning during conjoint therapy, examined the first 8 sessions of a multisystemic model of couple therapy, integrative problem-centered metaframeworks (Breunlin, Pinsof, Russell, & Lebow, 2011; Pinsof, Breunlin, Russell, & Lebow, 2011). The sample consisted of 125 heterosexual couples who reported on their relationship adjustment and individual functioning before every session using the Systemic Therapy Inventory of Change (Pinsof et al., 2009; Pinsof, Zinbarg, et al., in press). Data were analyzed using dyadic latent growth curve and cross-lagged models. For both men and women, relationship adjustment and individual functioning showed nonlinear change, increasing during Sessions 1-4 and stabilizing during Sessions 5-8. At pretreatment, women reported lower levels of relationship adjustment than men; no gender differences existed in initial levels of individual functioning or in the change trajectories of relationship adjustment or individual functioning. Higher relationship adjustment predicted positive change in individual functioning for men (but not for women). In contrast, there were no cross-lagged effects of individual functioning on relationship adjustment for men or women. The results demonstrate the importance of examining the processes by which relational and individual pathology respond to couple-based interventions.


Subject(s)
Couples Therapy , Emotional Adjustment , Family Characteristics , Feedback, Psychological , Interpersonal Relations , Adult , Confounding Factors, Epidemiologic , Couples Therapy/methods , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Treatment Outcome
6.
Fam Process ; 54(3): 464-84, 2015 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26096144

ABSTRACT

UNLABELLED: Progress or feedback research tracks and feeds back client progress data throughout the course of psychotherapy. In the effort to empirically ground psychotherapeutic practice, feedback research is both a complement and alternative to empirically supported manualized treatments. Evidence suggests that tracking and feeding back progress data with individual or nonsystemic feedback systems improves outcomes in individual and couple therapy. The research reported in this article pertains to the STIC(®) (Systemic Therapy Inventory of Change)-the first client-report feedback system designed to empirically assess and track change within client systems from multisystemic and multidimensional perspectives in individual, couple, and family therapy. Clients complete the STIC Initial before the first session and the shorter STIC Intersession before every subsequent session. This study tested and its results supported the hypothesized factor structure of the six scales that comprise both STIC forms in a clinical outpatient sample and in a normal, random representative sample of the U.S. POPULATION: This study also tested the STIC's concurrent validity and found that its 6 scales and 40 of its 41 subscales differentiated the clinical and normal samples. Lastly, the study derived clinical cut-offs for each scale and subscale to determine whether and how much a client's score falls in the normal or clinical range. Beyond supporting the factorial and concurrent validity of both STIC forms, this research supported the reliabilities of the six scales (Omegahierarchical ) as well as the reliabilities of most subscales (alpha and rate-rerate). This article delineates clinical implications and directions for future research.


Subject(s)
Family Relations/psychology , Family Therapy/methods , Psychotherapy/methods , Age Factors , Couples Therapy , Cross-Sectional Studies , Feedback, Psychological , Female , Humans , Male , Parent-Child Relations , Reference Values , Sex Factors
7.
Psychother Res ; 25(3): 348-64, 2015.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25506726

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: In this article we describe and assess the state of the science on systemic psychotherapies. In the quarter century since the first issue of Psychotherapy Research was published, considerable progress has been made. There is an increasingly solid evidence base for systemic treatments, which includes a wide range of approaches to working conjointly with couples and families. Moreover, there are exciting new developments that hold promise for explicating the dynamic processes of therapeutic change in couple and family systems. METHOD: We begin by explaining how we view "systemic therapies" as different from individual approaches and then summarize what we have learned in the past 25 years about this set of treatments, how we have learned it, and what we have yet to learn. RESULTS AND CONCLUSIONS: We consider current trends in research on outcomes and change process mechanisms, and end with speculations about what lies ahead in the interrelated domains of systemic research and practice.


Subject(s)
Couples Therapy/methods , Family Therapy/methods , Marital Therapy/methods , Mental Disorders/therapy , Research/trends , Couples Therapy/trends , Family Therapy/trends , Humans , Marital Therapy/trends , Outcome and Process Assessment, Health Care , Psychotherapy/methods , Psychotherapy/trends
8.
Psychother Res ; 19(2): 143-56, 2009 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19235092

ABSTRACT

This article details the development and methodological characteristics of the Systemic Therapy Inventory of Change (STIC), the first measurement system designed to assess change in family, couple, and individual therapy from a multisystemic and multidimensional perspective. The article focuses specifically on the developmental process that resulted in the five valid and reliable scales that comprise the core measure of the system, the INITIAL STIC, which is administered to clients just before beginning therapy. The scales focus on five systemic domains: individual adult, family of origin, couple, family, and individual child. This article describes the five system scales, the results of the factor analytic process that created them, as well as data on their convergent and discriminant validity.


Subject(s)
Psychotherapy/methods , Adolescent , Adult , Child , Child, Preschool , Couples Therapy/methods , Factor Analysis, Statistical , Family Therapy/methods , Female , Humans , Male , Psychometrics
9.
Fam Process ; 47(3): 281-301, 2008 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18831308

ABSTRACT

The Integrative Psychotherapy Alliance model brought an interpersonal and systemic perspective to bear on theory, research, and practice on the psychotherapeutic alliance. Questions have been raised about the independence of the theoretical factors in the model and their operationalization in the Individual, Couple, and Family Therapy Alliance Scales. This paper presents results of a confirmatory factor analysis of the scales that delineated at least three distinct interpersonal factors as well as shorter versions of the three scales to facilitate their use in research and practice. The paper also presents the results of a study testing each factor's association with client retention and progress over the first eight sessions in individual and couple therapy. At least two of the interpersonal factors were uniquely associated with progress in individual and couple functioning. Implications of the results for theory, research, practice, and training in individual, couple, and family therapy are elaborated.


Subject(s)
Family Characteristics , Family/psychology , Psychotherapy/methods , Delivery of Health Care, Integrated , Factor Analysis, Statistical , Goals , Humans , Interpersonal Relations , Reproducibility of Results , Surveys and Questionnaires
10.
J Marital Fam Ther ; 33(2): 245-57, 2007 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17437462

ABSTRACT

This study examined the ability of the therapeutic alliance to predict treatment progress on individual- and relationship-level variables from the early to middle phase of couple treatment. Although alliance did not predict progress in individual functioning, it accounted for 5-22% of the variance in improvement in marital distress. Women's mid-treatment alliance uniquely predicted improvement in marital distress, over and above early treatment alliance. When men's alliances with the therapist were stronger than their partners' at session 8, couples showed more improvement in marital distress. Treatment response was also positively associated with women's ratings of their partners' alliance. Results confirm that the therapeutic alliance in conjoint treatment is composed of distinct client subsystems that are useful predictors of treatment progress.


Subject(s)
Couples Therapy , Professional-Patient Relations , Psychotherapy , Adult , Aged , Data Collection , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Midwestern United States , Treatment Outcome
11.
Fam Process ; 41(2): 135-57, 2002.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12140958

ABSTRACT

During the last half of the 20th century within Western civilization, for the first time in human history, divorce replaced death as the most common endpoint of marriage. In this article I explore the history of this death-to-divorce transition, the forces associated with the transition, and what the transition may have revealed about the human capacity for monogamous, lifelong pair-bonding. The impact and consequences of the transition for the generations that came of age during it and immediately afterwards are examined, with particular attention to the emergence of new, alternative pair-bonding structures such as cohabitation and nonmarital co-parenting. The article highlights the inability of the dichotomous marriage-versus-being-single paradigm to encompass the new pair-bonding structures and the normalizing of divorce. Precepts for a new, more encompassing, veridical and humane pair-bonding paradigm are presented, and some of their implications for social policy, family law, social science, and couple and family therapy are elaborated.


Subject(s)
Divorce , Marriage/trends , Mortality , Female , Humans , Interpersonal Relations , Male , Marriage/psychology , Parenting , Social Change , United States/epidemiology
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