TY - JOUR
T1 - Sudden Gains in Day-to-Day Change
T2 - Revealing Nonlinear Patterns of Individual Improvement in Depression
AU - Helmich, Marieke A.
AU - Wichers, Marieke
AU - Olthof, Merlijn
AU - Strunk, Guido
AU - Aas, Benjamin
AU - Aichhorn, Wolfgang
AU - Schiepek, Günter
AU - Snippe, Evelien
PY - 2020/2
Y1 - 2020/2
N2 - OBJECTIVE: We examined individual overall trajectories of change and the occurrence of sudden gains in daily self-rated problem severity and the relation of these patterns to treatment response. METHOD: Mood disorder patients (N = 329, mean age = 44, 55% women) completed daily self-ratings about the severity of their complaints as a standard part of treatment, using the Therapy Process Questionnaire (TPQ). Per individual, the best-fitting defined (linear, log-linear, 1-step) trajectory was tested for significance: for change over time, and for specificity of the best-fitting trajectory. Two-hundred and three cases had ICD-10 Symptom Rating (ISR) depression scores posttreatment: a score ≤1 identified 114 treatment responders. Relation to response was examined for sudden gains and type of change trajectory. RESULTS: 138 cases (42%) had a significant decrease in problem severity, of which 54 cases (16%) had a defined trajectory: 50 cases with one-step improvement, and 4 with a linear improvement in daily problem severity. Sudden gains occurred in 28% of the total sample, and within 58% of improvement patterns. Specifically, sudden gains occurred in 68% of significant 1-step trajectories and 25% of the linear cases. Sudden gains and nonspecific change trajectories were significantly more frequent for treatment responders. CONCLUSIONS: At the day-level, patterns of improvement are nonlinear for most patients. Sudden gains occur within various forms of overall change and are associated with treatment response. Clinically relevant improvements in depression occur both gradually and abruptly, and this finding allows for the possibility that the remission process functions according to dynamical systems principles. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2020 APA, all rights reserved).
AB - OBJECTIVE: We examined individual overall trajectories of change and the occurrence of sudden gains in daily self-rated problem severity and the relation of these patterns to treatment response. METHOD: Mood disorder patients (N = 329, mean age = 44, 55% women) completed daily self-ratings about the severity of their complaints as a standard part of treatment, using the Therapy Process Questionnaire (TPQ). Per individual, the best-fitting defined (linear, log-linear, 1-step) trajectory was tested for significance: for change over time, and for specificity of the best-fitting trajectory. Two-hundred and three cases had ICD-10 Symptom Rating (ISR) depression scores posttreatment: a score ≤1 identified 114 treatment responders. Relation to response was examined for sudden gains and type of change trajectory. RESULTS: 138 cases (42%) had a significant decrease in problem severity, of which 54 cases (16%) had a defined trajectory: 50 cases with one-step improvement, and 4 with a linear improvement in daily problem severity. Sudden gains occurred in 28% of the total sample, and within 58% of improvement patterns. Specifically, sudden gains occurred in 68% of significant 1-step trajectories and 25% of the linear cases. Sudden gains and nonspecific change trajectories were significantly more frequent for treatment responders. CONCLUSIONS: At the day-level, patterns of improvement are nonlinear for most patients. Sudden gains occur within various forms of overall change and are associated with treatment response. Clinically relevant improvements in depression occur both gradually and abruptly, and this finding allows for the possibility that the remission process functions according to dynamical systems principles. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2020 APA, all rights reserved).
KW - depression
KW - treatment response
KW - idiographic change pattern
KW - sudden gains
KW - daily assessments
KW - COGNITIVE-BEHAVIORAL THERAPY
KW - SYMPTOM-CHANGE TRAJECTORIES
KW - DOSE-EFFECT RELATIONSHIP
KW - CRITICAL SLOWING-DOWN
KW - ICD-10-SYMPTOM-RATING ISR
KW - PSYCHOMETRIC PROPERTIES
KW - CRITICAL SESSIONS
KW - RATING ISR
KW - PSYCHOTHERAPY
KW - INVENTORY
U2 - 10.1037/ccp0000469
DO - 10.1037/ccp0000469
M3 - Article
VL - 88
SP - 119
EP - 127
JO - Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology
JF - Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology
SN - 0022-006X
IS - 2
ER -