Impact of an acceptance facilitating intervention on psychotherapists’ acceptance of blended therapy

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Erstveröffentlichung
2020-08-12
Wissenschaftlicher Artikel
Authors
Baumeister, Harald
Terhorst, Yannik
Grässle, Cora
Freudenstein, Maren
Nübling, Rüdiger
Faculties
Fakultät für Ingenieurwissenschaften, Informatik und PsychologieInstitutions
Institut für Psychologie und PädagogikExternal cooperations
Staatliche Kammer der Psychotherapeuten Baden-WürttembergVrije Universiteit Amsterdam
Published in
PLoS ONE ; 2020 (2020). - Art.-Nr. e0236995. - eISSN 1932-6203
Link to original publication
https://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0236995Peer review
ja
Document version
publishedVersion
Abstract
Blended therapy is a new approach combining advantages of face-to-face psychotherapy and Internet- and mobile-based interventions. Acceptance is a fundamental precondition for its implementation. The aim of this study was to assess 1) the acceptance of psychotherapists towards blended therapy, 2) the effectiveness of an acceptance facilitating intervention (AFI) on psychotherapists’ acceptance towards blended therapy and 3) to identify potential effect moderators. Psychotherapists (N = 284) were randomly assigned to a control (CG) or an intervention group (IG). The IG received a short video showing an example of blended therapy, the CG an attention placebo video. Both groups received a reliable online questionnaire assessing acceptance, effort expectancy, performance expectancy, facilitating conditions, social influence and internet anxiety. Between group differences were examined using t-tests and Mann-Whitney tests. Exploratory analysis was conducted to identify moderators. Psychotherapists in CG showed mixed baseline acceptance towards blended therapy (low = 40%, moderate = 33%, high = 27%). IG showed significantly higher acceptance compared to CG (d = .27, pone-sided = .029; low = 24%, moderate = 47%, high = 30%). Bootstrapped confidence intervals were overlapping. Performance expectancy (d = .35), effort expectancy (d = .44) and facilitating conditions (d = .28) were significantly increased (p < .05). No effects on social influence and internet anxiety were found (p>.05). Exploratory analysis indicated psychodynamic oriented psychotherapists profiting particularly from the AFI. Blended therapy is a promising approach to improve healthcare. Psychotherapists show mixed acceptance, which might be improvable by AFIs, particularly in subpopulations of initially rather skeptical psychotherapists. Forthcoming studies should extend the present study by shifting focus from attitudes to the impact of different forms of AFIs on uptake.
Funding information
Gefördert vom Ministerium für Wissenschaft, Forschung und Kunst Baden-Württemberg
Is supplemented by
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0236995.s001https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0236995.s002
Subject Headings
Psychotherapie [GND]Telemedizin [GND]
Psychotherapy; Methods [MeSH]
Remote consultation [MeSH]
Telemedicine [MeSH]
Dewey Decimal Group
DDC 150 / PsychologyMetadata
Show full item recordCitation example
Baumeister, Harald et al. (2020): Impact of an acceptance facilitating intervention on psychotherapists’ acceptance of blended therapy. Open Access Repositorium der Universität Ulm. http://dx.doi.org/10.18725/OPARU-33992