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BEATVIC, a body-oriented resilience therapy for individuals with psychosis: Short term results of a multi-center RCT. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Individuals with psychotic disorders are at higher risk of victimization, prompting the development of a new therapy called BEATVIC to prevent such incidents, which was tested in a randomized controlled trial with 105 participants.
  • The trial compared the BEATVIC intervention with befriending sessions, aiming to measure short-term effects on victimization risk factors and overall well-being, finding that 60% of participants in both groups experienced reduced victimization after six months.
  • Despite the initial success in reducing victimization, BEATVIC did not show greater effectiveness compared to befriending, and no additional positive changes in risk factors were observed, indicating the need for further long-term analysis.

Article Abstract

Background: Individuals with a psychotic disorder are at an increased risk of victimization, but evidenced-based interventions are lacking.

Aims: A body-oriented resilience therapy ('BEATVIC') aimed at preventing victimization was developed and its effectiveness was assessed in a multicenter randomized controlled trial.

Methods: 105 people with a psychotic disorder were recruited from six mental health centers. Participants were randomly allocated to 20 BEATVIC group sessions (n = 53) or befriending group sessions (n = 52). Short term effects on risk factors for victimization (e.g. social cognitive deficits, inadequate interpersonal behavior, low self-esteem, internalized stigma, aggression regulation problems), physical fitness and secondary outcomes were expected. At six-month follow-up, the effect on victimization (either a 50% reduction or an absence of victimization incidents) was examined.

Results: Intervention-dropout was 28.30% for BEATVIC and 39.62% for befriending. In both conditions the majority of participants (60.5% BEATVIC vs 62.9% befriending) showed a reduction or absence of victimization incidents at six months follow-up, which was not significantly different according to condition. Multilevel analyses revealed no main effect of time and no significant time x group interaction on other outcome measures. Per protocol analyses (participants attending ≥ 75% of the sessions) did not change these results.

Conclusions: Although a reduction or absence of victimization was found at short term follow-up for the majority of participants, BEATVIC was not more effective than the active control condition. No short-term additional effects on risk factors of victimization were found. Analysis of the data at 2-year follow-up is warranted to investigate possible effects in the long-term.

Trial Registration Number: Current Controlled Trials: ISRCTN21423535.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9770373PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0279185PLOS

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