PLoS ONE (Jan 2019)

What format of treatment do patients with emotional disorders prefer and why? Implications for public mental health settings and policies.

  • Jorge Osma,
  • Carlos Suso-Ribera,
  • Óscar Peris-Baquero,
  • Marta Gil-Lacruz,
  • Luisa Pérez-Ayerra,
  • Vanesa Ferreres-Galan,
  • Mª Ángeles Torres-Alfosea,
  • María López-Escriche,
  • Olga Domínguez

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0218117
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 6
p. e0218117

Abstract

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ObjectiveWe analyzed the preference of three psychological intervention formats-individual, group, and online-in a sample of 267 patients with a primary diagnosis of emotional disorder in Spanish public mental health settings.MethodWe studied patients' preferences considering sociodemographic characteristics, diagnoses, history of psychological treatments, number of sessions, and satisfaction with past interventions.ResultsMost participants (85.4%) preferred psychological treatment in an individual format, 14.2% in group, and 0.4% online. When comparing the people who chose individual and group treatment, no demographic or clinical differences were found. The arguments against group format were the lack of privacy and expression difficulties. Regarding online format, these included being considered impersonal and ineffective.ConclusionThe rejection of group and online psychotherapy formats allows us to define the actions we should carry out in public mental health settings to improve the acceptance of more cost-effective therapy formats.