Are Therapists Less Skilful in Teletherapy Than In-Person Therapy Scenarios? A Latent Profile Analysis of Facilitative Interpersonal Skills

IF 3.2 3区 心理学 Q1 PSYCHOLOGY, CLINICAL
Tao Lin, Katie Aafjes-van Doorn, Timothy G. Heckman, Eva Antebi-Lerman, Timothy Anderson
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Abstract

Emerging research suggests that therapists feel less efficacious administering therapy remotely than in-person. These findings, however, are based almost exclusively on therapist self-reports. The current study compared therapists' self-reported and observer-rated therapeutic skills across simulated in-person and teletherapy scenarios to determine if common factors and therapeutic skills differed between the two treatment settings. A diverse sample of 223 licensed therapists and trainees simulated the provision of psychotherapy using standardised clips of challenging therapeutic scenarios in both tele- and in-person therapy. Common factors and therapeutic skills in tele- and in-person therapy simulations were rated by trained coders and compared. Latent profile analysis identified latent subgroups of therapists based on differences between skills when providing in-person and teletherapy. Both self-report and observer-rated measures indicated that therapists demonstrated reduced common factors and therapeutic skills in teletherapy scenarios than in-person therapy scenarios. Three latent profiles based on differences in skills between teletherapy versus in-person therapy among therapists were identified: developing teletherapists (54.26%), teletherapy experts (34.98%) and teletherapy-challenged therapists (10.76%). No variable assessed in the study differentiated the three groups. Therapists generally demonstrated lower levels of therapeutic skills in teletherapy compared with in-person therapy settings. Considerable variability in the skill difference between the two psychotherapy formats was found among therapists. Trainings targeting skills that are complicated by teletherapy (e.g., emotional expression) are needed.

Abstract Image

治疗师在远程治疗中不如面对面治疗熟练吗?促进性人际交往能力的潜在特征分析
新兴研究表明,治疗师认为远程治疗不如面对面治疗有效。然而,这些发现几乎完全是基于治疗师的自我报告。目前的研究比较了治疗师在模拟面对面治疗和远程治疗场景中的自我报告和观察者评价的治疗技能,以确定两种治疗环境中的共同因素和治疗技能是否不同。223名有执照的治疗师和受训人员使用远程和面对面治疗中具有挑战性的治疗场景的标准化片段模拟心理治疗的提供。由训练有素的编码员对远程和现场治疗模拟中的常见因素和治疗技能进行评分并进行比较。潜在剖面分析根据面对面治疗和远程治疗的技能差异确定了潜在的治疗师亚群。自我报告和观察者评价的测量都表明,治疗师在远程治疗场景中表现出的共同因素和治疗技能比在现场治疗场景中要低。根据远程治疗与面对面治疗的技能差异,确定了治疗师的三个潜在特征:发展中的远程治疗师(54.26%)、远程治疗专家(34.98%)和远程治疗挑战治疗师(10.76%)。在这项研究中,没有评估任何变量来区分这三组。与面对面治疗相比,治疗师在远程治疗中通常表现出较低的治疗技能水平。在治疗师之间发现两种心理治疗形式的技能差异有相当大的差异。需要针对因远程治疗而变得复杂的技能(例如,情绪表达)进行培训。
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来源期刊
Clinical psychology & psychotherapy
Clinical psychology & psychotherapy PSYCHOLOGY, CLINICAL-
CiteScore
6.30
自引率
5.60%
发文量
106
期刊介绍: Clinical Psychology & Psychotherapy aims to keep clinical psychologists and psychotherapists up to date with new developments in their fields. The Journal will provide an integrative impetus both between theory and practice and between different orientations within clinical psychology and psychotherapy. Clinical Psychology & Psychotherapy will be a forum in which practitioners can present their wealth of expertise and innovations in order to make these available to a wider audience. Equally, the Journal will contain reports from researchers who want to address a larger clinical audience with clinically relevant issues and clinically valid research.
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