Publications by authors named "Bockting C"

Article Synopsis
  • The study explores the ecological momentary intervention (EMI) called SELFIE, designed to improve self-esteem in youth who have experienced childhood trauma through a smartphone app, emphasizing its accessibility and real-time support.
  • By utilizing a realist evaluation approach, researchers identified key factors that enhance the intervention's effectiveness, such as the sense of privacy from using personal smartphones, which encourages greater engagement and disclosure from users.
  • Findings suggest that continuous availability and the opportunity for real-life skill practice enhance the intervention's generalizability, while attention to potential technical issues is crucial for maintaining its positive impact.
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Background: Multiple ethnic minority populations in Europe show high risk of major depressive disorder (MDD), with ethnic discrimination and low socioeconomic position (SEP) as established risk factors. How this risk is shaped by the interactions between these, and other social factors, remains to be elucidated. We aimed to develop a causal-loop diagram (CLD) to gain a better understanding of how factors at the intersection of ethnic discrimination and SEP dynamically interact to drive MDD risk.

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Importance: Dynamical systems theory is widely used to explain tipping points, cycles, and chaos in complex systems ranging from the climate to ecosystems. It has been suggested that the same theory may be used to explain the nature and dynamics of psychiatric disorders, which may come and go with symptoms changing over a lifetime. Here we review evidence for the practical applicability of this theory and its quantitative tools in psychiatry.

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Article Synopsis
  • Psychiatric disorders can fluctuate over a person's lifetime, suggesting a need for a new approach to diagnosis and treatment, influenced by dynamical systems theory which looks at complex systems.
  • This theory posits that mental health can be viewed as a dynamic property, where a healthy state is resilient, while disorders represent alternative states the system can become trapped in.
  • The findings from other complex systems indicate potential new methods for assessing and managing mental health resilience, offering practical applications for psychiatry.
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This paper describes the development and validation of the Autonomy Scale Amsterdam (ASA). We propose that a new measure of autonomy is needed and, as such, we developed and validated an autonomy scale relevant for psychiatry. Based on literature, an expert meeting and three samples of the general population (N = 298, N = 207, N = 309) we provide evidence (a) that supports a 6-factor structure model as a better fit than alternative models with a high reliability to capture the concept of autonomy consisting of: Self-integration, Engagement with life, Goal-directedness, Self-control, External constraints and Social support, (b) for the scale's convergent and discriminant validity with constructs in autonomy's nomological network and (c) for the scale's criterion validity with well-established well-being outcomes, and (d) that the measure is not redundant with a prior measure of autonomy, the autonomy-connectedness scale, and demonstrates incremental validity in the prediction of mental health over and above an existing measure of autonomy.

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Article Synopsis
  • - Major Depressive Disorder (MDD) is common and often relapses due to persistent negative thinking and rumination, which can be alleviated by positive fantasizing and mindfulness interventions.
  • - The study aims to compare how these two interventions affect rumination differently in individuals with a history of MDD and those who have never been depressed, exploring the mechanisms behind their effects.
  • - A crossover trial will involve participants from both groups completing various psychological and physiological assessments before and during the interventions to gauge their effectiveness.
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This paper describes the implementation of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD)-specific cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT) for IBD patients with poor quality of life (QoL), anxiety and depression, in four hospitals in the Netherlands. Treatment outcomes were compared with those of a previously published randomized control trial (RCT) of 'IBD-specific CBT', following a benchmark strategy. Primary outcome was IBD-specific QoL (IBDQ) completed before and after CBT, secondary outcomes were anxiety and depressive symptoms (HADS, CES-D).

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Article Synopsis
  • Major Depressive Disorder often recurs, leading to increased disability and healthcare costs; this study evaluates the economic viability of Preventive Cognitive Therapy (PCT) compared to standard care for patients with recurrent depression who have remitted after Cognitive Behavioural Therapy.
  • A randomized trial involving 214 participants assessed health-related quality of life, depression-free days, healthcare use, and productivity losses over 15 months; results indicated PCT offered more depression-free days but at a higher societal cost.
  • While PCT showed potential benefits in terms of depression-free days, it was not deemed cost-effective overall, with limitations noted regarding the short follow-up period for assessing long-term outcomes.
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Background: A comprehensive picture is lacking of the impact of early childhood (age 0-5) risk factors on the subsequent development of mental health symptoms.

Objective: In this systematic review, we investigated which individual, social and urban factors, experienced in early childhood, contribute to the development of later anxiety and depression, behavioural problems, and internalising and externalising symptoms in youth.

Methods: Embase, MEDLINE, Scopus, and PsycInfo were searched on the 5 of January 2022.

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Background: There is an urgent need to better understand and prevent relapse in major depressive disorder (MDD). We explored the differential impact of various MDD relapse prevention strategies (pharmacological and/or psychological) on affect fluctuations and individual affect networks in a randomised setting, and their predictive value for relapse.

Methods: We did a secondary analysis using experience sampling methodology (ESM) data from individuals with remitted recurrent depression that was collected alongside a randomised controlled trial that ran in the Netherlands, comparing: (I) tapering antidepressants while receiving preventive cognitive therapy (PCT), (II) combining antidepressants with PCT, or (III) continuing antidepressants without PCT, for the prevention of depressive relapse, as well as ESM data from 11 healthy controls.

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Importance: Targeting low self-esteem in youth exposed to childhood adversity is a promising strategy for preventing adult mental disorders. Ecological momentary interventions (EMIs) allow for the delivery of youth-friendly, adaptive interventions for improving self-esteem, but robust trial-based evidence is pending.

Objective: To examine the efficacy of SELFIE, a novel transdiagnostic, blended EMI for improving self-esteem plus care as usual (CAU) compared with CAU only.

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Background: Depression is a highly common and recurrent condition. Predicting who is at most risk of relapse or recurrence can inform clinical practice. Applying machine-learning methods to Individual Participant Data (IPD) can be promising to improve the accuracy of risk predictions.

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Question: Partial remission of major depressive disorder (MDD) is a debilitating and distressing clinical state related to chronicity, morbidity and relapse. Although one-third of patients remit partially, evidence for treatment efficacy is unclear. We provide an overview of treatment options and their efficacy.

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Tailoring interventions to the individual has been hypothesized to improve treatment efficacy. Personalization of target-specific underlying mechanisms might improve treatment effects as well as adherence. Data-driven personalization of treatment, however, is still in its infancy, especially concerning the integration of multiple sources of data-driven advice with shared decision-making.

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Introduction: Different types of psychotherapy are effective for treating major depressive disorder across groups yet show large within-group differences. Patient personality style is considered a potentially useful variable for treatment matching.

Objective: This study is the first experimental test of the interaction between therapeutic approach and patients' dependent versus self-critical personality styles.

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Article Synopsis
  • - The study explored how abnormalities in self-referential thinking and brain networks might predict relapses in individuals with recurrent Major Depressive Disorder (MDD) who are in remission compared to never-depressed individuals.
  • - Remitted MDD patients were found to have higher levels of rumination but showed no differences in implicit negative self-associations or resting-state functional connectivity (RSFC) in key brain networks compared to controls.
  • - Relapse in remitted patients was associated with specific brain connectivity patterns and cognitive factors, indicating that these elements could help predict future depressive episodes even after symptoms have improved.
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Introduction: This study examines the performance of active learning-aided systematic reviews using a deep learning-based model compared to traditional machine learning approaches, and explores the potential benefits of model-switching strategies.

Methods: Comprising four parts, the study: 1) analyzes the performance and stability of active learning-aided systematic review; 2) implements a convolutional neural network classifier; 3) compares classifier and feature extractor performance; and 4) investigates the impact of model-switching strategies on review performance.

Results: Lighter models perform well in early simulation stages, while other models show increased performance in later stages.

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Background: The COVID-19 pandemic has affected people globally both physically and psychologically. The increased demands for mental health interventions provided by clinical psychologists, psychotherapists and mental health care professionals, as well as the rapid change in work setting (e.g.

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Background: Alterations in stress regulation and function of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis during infancy may be a risk factor for the development of psychopathology later in life. Maternal childhood trauma, depression, anxiety and stressful life events are individually associated with HPA axis dysregulation. Less is known about their interdependent influence on maternal and infant stress regulation in at risk populations.

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