Frontiers in Psychology (Oct 2020)

Long-Term Effects of Home-Based Family Therapy for Non-responding Adolescents With Psychiatric Disorders. A 3-Year Follow-Up

  • Egon Bachler,
  • Benjamin Aas,
  • Herbert Bachler,
  • Kathrin Viol,
  • Helmut Johannes Schöller,
  • Marius Nickel,
  • Günter Schiepek

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2020.475525
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11

Abstract

Read online

ObjectiveHome-based treatment of families with low socio-economic status and multiple psychosocial problems (multi-problem families, MPFs) is gaining importance in clinical social epidemiology and health services research. The sustainability of the treatment is of special importance in order to breach transgenerational effects.MethodsWe examined outcome, effect size, and clinical significance of home-based treatment for 84 multi-problem families in a naturalistic setting. 48 of the families were available for a follow-up after 3 years. The baseline characteristics of these family systems included low collaboration, an increased family adversity index, minors with high rates of child psychiatric disorders, a high prevalence of comorbidity, low relational family functioning, and adolescents who refused any form of treatment or had unilaterally terminated different forms of treatment before. The home-based family therapy consisted of one or two face-to-face counseling sessions per week over an average of 28.8 months (SD = 19.2). The symptoms and competence of the adolescents, the caregivers, and the family structure were assessed with 13 variables.ResultsAll variables showed significant improvement rates (pre- vs. post- treatment) with medium to high effect sizes (mean of Cohen’s d = 1.04, range = 0.34 – 2.18). All variables showed a sustained or even further improvement at follow-up.ConclusionThis study provides evidence of statistically (p), practically (d), and clinically (RCI) significant changes in symptom and competence-related variables among adolescents and caregivers in MPFs with sustainable long-term effects in the 3-year follow-up period.

Keywords