1. Homework Compliance and Quality in Cognitive Behavioral Therapies for Anxiety Disorders and Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder
- Author
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Todd J. Farchione, Laren R. Conklin, David H. Barlow, and Andrew J. Curreri
- Subjects
Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder ,050103 clinical psychology ,Generalized anxiety disorder ,medicine.medical_treatment ,education ,Compliance (psychology) ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Medical diagnosis ,Cognitive Behavioral Therapy ,Panic disorder ,05 social sciences ,Social anxiety ,Phobia, Social ,Cognition ,medicine.disease ,Anxiety Disorders ,030227 psychiatry ,Cognitive behavioral therapy ,Clinical Psychology ,Treatment Outcome ,Panic Disorder ,Anxiety ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology ,human activities ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
Homework assignments are an integral part of cognitive behavioral therapy, providing patients with opportunities to practice skills between sessions. Generally, greater homework compliance is associated with better treatment outcomes. However, fewer studies have examined the effect of homework quality on treatment outcomes. This study examined homework compliance and quality as predictors of outcome and attrition across five CBT protocols. A sample of 179 individuals with principal diagnoses of generalized anxiety disorder, panic disorder, social anxiety disorder, or obsessive-compulsive disorder were randomized to receive a transdiagnostic CBT protocol (the Unified Protocol) or a single-diagnosis CBT protocol corresponding to their principal diagnosis. The Unified Protocol had a lower homework burden than the majority of the single-diagnosis protocols, which varied in degree of assigned homework. Despite this, there were no differences in average homework compliance or quality across principal diagnosis, treatment condition, or their interaction. Homework quality was significantly related to all symptom outcomes (self-reported and clinician-rated anxiety and depressive symptoms, clinician-rated clinical severity). Homework compliance was significantly related to clinician-rated anxiety symptom outcomes. Additionally, greater homework quality and compliance were both significantly associated with increased odds of completing treatment, suggesting homework variables can be useful and easily obtainable predictors of treatment retention.
- Published
- 2021