Imagery Rescripting as a stand-alone treatment for posttraumatic stress disorder related to childhood abuse: A randomized controlled trial

Open Access
Authors
Publication date 12-2022
Journal Journal-of-Behavior-Therapy-and-Experimental-Psychiatry.
Article number 101769
Volume | Issue number 77
Number of pages 13
Organisations
  • Faculty of Social and Behavioural Sciences (FMG) - Psychology Research Institute (PsyRes)
Abstract
Background and objectives
Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) related to childhood abuse (CA) is associated with high symptom complexity. This study examined the efficacy of Imagery Rescripting (ImRs) as a stand-alone treatment versus a sequenced approach with Skills training in Affective and Interpersonal Regulation (STAIR) followed by ImRs for CA-related PTSD.
Methods
Outpatients of two mental health clinics with CA-related PTSD (N = 61) were randomly assigned to ImRs (16 sessions; n = 21), STAIR/ImRs (8 STAIR-sessions followed by 16 ImRs-sessions; n = 20), or Waitlist (8 weeks; n = 20). Patients of the waitlist condition were also randomized to the two active conditions for comparison of STAIR/ImRs (total n for this condition = 31) and ImRs (total n for this condition = 30) and started treatment after waitlist completion. Assessments took place at pre-treatment, after each treatment phase and at 12-week post-intervention follow-up. PTSD symptoms and diagnosis were primary outcome measures, and depression, emotion regulation and interpersonal functioning were secondary outcomes.
Results
ImRs showed greater reduction of PTSD severity (effect sizes [ES] 1.40–1.63) than STAIR (ES, 0.23–0.33) as compared to waitlist. When comparing STAIR/ImRs and ImRs directly, (i.e. including re-randomized Waitlist-patients), PTSD symptoms reduced significantly (within condition ES, 1.64–2.10) and improved further to 12-week follow-up (within-condition ES, 2.33–2.66), with no significant difference between both conditions (between-condition ES, 0.21–0.45). Loss of PTSD diagnosis was achieved by 70% in the ImRs condition and 86% in the STAIR/ImRs condition.
Limitations
The sample size was relatively small.
Conclusions
Results show that ImRs is an effective treatment for CA-related PTSD, whereby the current data do not convincingly show an additive effect of STAIR.
Document type Article
Note With supplementary files
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jbtep.2022.101769
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1-s2.0-S0005791622000477-main (Final published version)
Supplementary materials
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