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Whereas diagnosis helps you understand what is going on, formulation allows you to understand why that problem is happening and how to address it. This chapter provides instruction on key CBTx skills relating to case formulation and treatment implementation, guided by a scientist-practitioner approach. It provides practical tools, rubrics, and metaphors that can assist in formulation, and discusses treatment readiness as a key construct to treatment implementation. Finally, the chapter outlines how to use the book to help readers develop personalised treatment plans for patients.
Charles S. Mansueto, Behavior Therapy Center of Greater Washington, Maryland,Suzanne Mouton-Odum, Psychology Houston, PC - The Center for Cognitive Behavioral Treatment, Texas,Ruth Goldfinger Golomb, Behavior Therapy Center of Greater Washington, Maryland
This chapter describes the process of ComB treatment implementation, in which the “active ingredients” are introduced that that are chosen to reduce the power of antecedent cues, to divert the individual’s ability to engage in their BFRB, and to provide alternative means for achieving reinforcing outcomes that encourage and perpetuate BFRB activity. The process of introducing appropriate interventions is described in detail, with emphases on fitting interventions to each client’s needs and preferences. The reader is guided through methods for choosing specific interventions, monitoring their effectiveness, and making decisions about modifying the intervention plan as therapy moves forward. The SCAMP formulation is revisited to illustrate how specific interventions within each of the five domains draw upon tried-and-true cognitive behavioral techniques that can be incorporated in problem-solving common difficulties encountered within each domain.
Treatment enactment, a final stage of treatment implementation, refers to patients’ application of skills and concepts from treatment sessions into everyday life situations. We examined treatment enactment in a two-arm, multicenter trial comparing two psychoeducational treatments for persons with chronic moderate to severe traumatic brain injury and problematic anger.
Methods:
Seventy-one of 90 participants from the parent trial underwent a telephone enactment interview at least 2 months (median 97 days, range 64–586 days) after cessation of treatment. Enactment, quantified as average frequency of use across seven core treatment components, was compared across treatment arms: anger self-management training (ASMT) and personal readjustment and education (PRE), a structurally equivalent control. Components were also rated for helpfulness when used. Predictors of, and barriers to, enactment were explored.
Results:
More than 80% of participants reported remembering all seven treatment components when queried using a recognition format. Enactment was equivalent across treatments. Most used/most helpful components concerned normalizing anger and general anger management strategies (ASMT), and normalizing traumatic brain injury-related changes while providing hope for improvement (PRE). Higher baseline executive function and IQ were predictive of better enactment, as well as better episodic memory (trend). Poor memory was cited by many participants as a barrier to enactment, as was the reaction of other people to attempted use of strategies.
Conclusions:
Treatment enactment is a neglected component of implementation in neuropsychological clinical trials, but is important both to measure and to help participants achieve sustained carryover of core treatment ingredients and learned material to everyday life.
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