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This interview was published on Solutions Centre
Solutions Centre wants to keep general practitioners up to date
of current research in the field of solution-focused practice. At the same time
we want to offer researchers an opportunity to present their work to a broader
audience.
SC: Alasdair, we'd
first like to ask you a few questions about your current
research. Could you describe it briefly?
Alasdair:
This study reports the outcomes from our solution-focused brief
therapy out-patient clinic in adult mental health. A
questionnaire was sent to clients and their family doctors one
year after they ceased to attend. The seventy-five clients on
whom this latest study is based represent twenty-eight clinic
sessions per year. If we had been able to work for three full
days weekly at the same rate we would have seen 160 clients
annually. If the same good outcome rate was achieved this would
make a substantial difference to our Psychotherapy Department,
which received in excess of 200 new referrals in one year. It is
an uncontrolled naturalistic study of brief therapy in a
psychotherapy service. It is therefore open to the biases
inherent in such studies, such as referral bias and differential
responding by satisfied clients. However, it represents a study
of effectiveness in a real-life setting.
SC: What are the most
important findings of the research? Are these findings roughly
in line with previous research?
Alasdair: Seventy-five clients were referred, of whom
fifty-three were seen and forty-one traced at follow-up.
Thirty-one (76%) reported a good outcome, with an overall
average of 5.02 sessions, 20% attending only one session.
Combining these data with our two previous studies, 170
referrals were received of whom 136 attended and 118 were
traced. Good outcome was reported by eighty-three clients (70%)
with a mean of 4.03 sessions per case. There was no significant
difference between the groups in solving additional problems or
seeking further professional help. New problems were
significantly less common in the 'good outcome' group. In
common with other therapies, long-standing problems did less
well. This study confirms previous reports in terms of overall
benefit. Seventy-six percent of clients report the achievement
of some or all of their goals. This echoes similar studies from
other countries, including Germany, Spain and the USA.
SC: Were there any results
that surprised you or intrigued you?
Alasdair: In all three studies there were no significant
differences in outcome between socioeconomic groups. This is
important because the higher socio-economic groups usually have
more resources and better access to treatment services, so they
have more choices. It is important to make treatments
available which will be effective for those from relatively
deprived groups.
SC: One thing that
surprised me was that negative goals are not related to poor
therapy outcome. What are your thoughts on this?
Alasdair: Choosing negative goals is not associated with a poor
outcome. This is counter-intuitive, since it is easier to do
something new than to stop something and put nothing in its
place. However, our clients did put new things into place
so maybe goal-setting is not in itself a key variable.
SC: If you look at
research findings in general, would you say research indicates
SF to be the most effective approach to therapy?
Alasdair: More generally, solution-focused therapy has a more
substantial research base than some other psychological
treatments. Results from different countries all show similar
levels of benefit. There appears to be no link between diagnosis
and response to treatment, an issue which is currently leading
to challenges to the 'Evidence-based Practice' movement in the
USA and elsewhere (Wampold and Bhati 2004).
SC: Are there examples of
problems for which SF does not seem to be the most effective
approach?
Alasdair: Specialist teams eg for alcohol or domestic violence,
seem to have better outcomes, which suggests that it is possible
to refine the sft model further for specific client groups and
situations.
SC: What further research
is needed?
Alasdair: Further research into sft could examine such issues
more closely. We also need more comparison studies against other
treatments such as that of Knekt and Lindforss (see below).
Dr. Alasdair Macdonald, president of the European Brief Therapy
Association (EBTA) has been a consultant psychiatrist since
1980. He also uses his solution-focused skills as a freelance
management consultant and trainer. His main research interest is
in the study of process and outcomes in SFBT. Alasdair has over
30 scientific publications on his name and a number of other
published pieces. For more information on Alasdair and his work
we refer you to his
website.
Coert
Visser (coert.visser@planet.nl)
is a consultant, coach and trainer using a positive change
approach. This approach is focused on simply helping individuals,
teams and organizations to make progress in the direction of
their own choice. Coert wrote many articles and a few books.
More information:
www.m-cc.nl
/
www.m-cc.nl/solutionfocusedchange.htm
/
Dutch network /
Dutch blog,
http://solutionfocusedchange.blogspot.com
References:
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Macdonald AJ
(2005). Brief therapy in adult psychiatry: results from 15 years of
practice. Journal of Family Therapy, 27, 65-75.
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Knekt, P,
Lindfors O (2004) A randomized trial of the effect of four forms of
psychotherapy on depressive and anxiety disorders: design, methods and
results on the effectiveness of short-term psychodynamic psychotherapy and
solution-focused therapy during a one-year follow-up. Studies in
social security and health, no. 77. The Social Insurance Institution,
Helsinki, Finland. (www.kela.fi/research)
-
Wampold BE,
Bhati KS (2004) Attending to the omissions: a historical examination
of evidence-based practice movements. Professional Psychology,
Research and Practice, 35(6), 563-570.
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