Title: Complexities of measuring change in psychotherapy
1Complexities of measuring change in psychotherapy
2Acknowledgements
- Phil Richardson, Kevin Jones others
- Jan Lees, Mark Freestone, Nick Manning others
- Michael Barkham and many others
- Mark Ashworth, Mel Shepherd, Susan Robinson,
Maria Kordowicz others - Susan McPherson
- Jo-anne Carlyle
3Classical psychometric model
- We all have a position on an unmeasurable
(latent) dimension of interest and of change
(true value). - Quality of measurement a function of two issues
- Reliability
- Validity
- No validity without reliability
4Reliability
- Extent to which the measure is uncontaminated by
random noise - Example 1 (hard measurement) working with
obesity and using a poor scales to measure
peoples weight it may fluctuate a lot entirely
randomly. - Example 2 (our measurement) measuring
depression using a visual analogue rating scale
the measurement may be contaminated by
imprecision in where the person places their mark
(and much else potentially).
5Validity
- Extent to which the measure measures what it is
supposed to and is uncontaminated by systematic
corrupting by measuring other non-random issues - Example 1 obesity measuring peoples weight is
pretty useless unless you also measure height as
obesity is (largely) a function of weight and
height so measuring the one without the other
leaves your measure systematically biased
invalid. - Example 2 in a multi-item measure of depression
an item asking about weight loss will be
systematically affected by recent deliberate
dieting, drinking alcohol rather than eating
wisely or by serious physical illness causing
weight loss (or famine but rarely in the western
world).
6Reliability a graphical model
- circles are latent, unmeasurable, variables
- squares are measurables
- straight arrows show directional influence
- everything is nomothetic,...
- ...i.e. something on which each person has a value
7Psychometrics classical model
- assume one source of common variance...
- ... the latent trait to measure
- only source of covariation between items
- each item is also affected by error
- errors are independent, and
- ... uncorrelated with the latent trait of interest
8Cronbachs alpha
- Reliability proportion of the measured variation
(sum of the boxes) - from the latent trait
- ... not to the sources of error
- estimated as coefficient alpha, proportion of
covariance to variance
9Challenges of our measurement
- We have little time or money for measuring
- What we measure is often either complex (quality
of life) or - idiosyncratic (recovering from death of partner
bringing back abuse in childhood and early death
of abusing parent).
10Recent measures
- Format
- Short(ish),
- multi-item,
- self-report measures
- Intention
- Not so much designed to provide strong
measurement of a unidimensional latent variable
but - to provide rapid coverage of a broad range of
issues likely to cover many clients likely
change. - Typical e.g.s
- Brief Symptom Inventory
- CORE-OM
- OQ-45.
11Typical measures
- Multiple items, e.g.
- I have felt terribly alone and isolated
- Time focus
- Over the last week
- Use rating anchors by frequency
- Not at all, Only occasionally, Sometimes,
Often, Most or all the time - Or intensity
- Not at all to Extremely
12Issues about items
- I have felt I have someone to turn to for support
when needed - What does turning to involve? What is
support? How much does when needed limit
applicability? -
- I have felt O.K. about myself
- How OK is OK?!
- I have felt able to cope when things go wrong
- How wrong is wrong? What is coping? (Quite a
few European languages dont have a verb to
cope) -
- Tension and anxiety have prevented me doing
important things - What if it was only tension? Or only anxiety?
How important do things have to be to be
important?
13Issues about time frame
- Over the last week
- Do people really anchor to that?
- Could it mean
- since Sunday?
- since Monday?
- the last seven days?
14Issues about anchors
- Not at all
- Only occasionally
- Sometimes
- Often
- Most or all the time
- Is my Only occasionally your Sometimes?
15Panel change model
16Simple change variance model
Instead of modelling each occasion separately
look at the variance of the differences between
observed scores for each individual Get
internal reliability of item change
17Item change
- Binary, Y/N item now have three possible change
scores -1, 0, 1 - Three level item five scores -2, -1, 0, 1,
2 - Four level item seven scores -3, -2, -1, 0,
1, 2, 3 - n-level item always 2n 1 differences
18Real data for the simple model
- Exploratory, pragmatic RCT
- Slim paradigm RCT
- Twelve weeks of
- Group based AT cf.
- Treatment as usual
- Design was N 120 (60 per arm)
- Minimisation randomisation
- Richardson, Jones, Evans, Stevens Rowe (2007)
An exploratory randomised trial of group based
art therapy as an adjunctive treatment in severe
mental illness. Journal of Mental Health 16(4)
483-491.
19Test BrSI (k53)
n Low a Up n Low a Up
T1 43 .97 .98 .99 38 .92 .95 .97
T2 36 .96 .97 .98 34 .89 .93 .96
T3 22 .93 .96 .98 17 .90 .95 .98
1-2 34 .90 .94 .96 31 .87 .92 .95
1-3 22 .83 .90 .95 15 .76 .87 .95
20Test2 SANS (k24)
n Low a Up n Low a Up
1 46 .90 .93 .96 42 .81 .87 .92
2 38 .89 .93 .96 35 .81 .88 .93
3 22 .93 .96 .98 18 .48 .71 .87
1-2 38 .81 .88 .93 35 .78 .86 .92
1-3 22 .86 .92 .96 18 .62 .79 .91
21But IIP (k32)
n Low a Up n Low a Up
T1 44 .86 .90 .94 42 .80 .87 .92
T2 37 .87 .90 .95 35 .84 .90 .94
T3 22 .78 .87 .94 18 .82 .90 .96
1-2 36 .64 .76 .86 34 .29 .54 .74
1-3 21 .47 .69 .85 17 .60 .79 .91
22Rating? BPRS (k19)
n Low a Up n Low a Up
1 46 .64 .75 .85 43 .53 .68 .81
2 38 .62 .75 .85 35 .40 .62 .78
3 22 .62 .78 .89 18 .47 .70 .87
1-2 38 .60 .75 .85 35 .20 .48 .70
1-3 22 .66 .80 .90 18 -.10 .39 .73
23Ratings HoNOS (k12)
n Low a Up n Low a Up
1 46 .58 .72 .83 43 .45 .64 .78
2 38 .46 .65 .8 35 .45 .65 .8
3 22 .44 .68 .85 18 .23 .58 .82
1-2 38 -.20 .22 .54 35 -1.24 -.43 .18
1-3 22 .07 .47 .74 18 -1.15 -.16 .49
24Routine test-retest (CORE, k34, students)
n Low a Up
1 53 .92 .94 .96
2 41 .94 .96 .98
1-2 40 .65 .77 .86
25Diversity complexity of change
- Naturalistic study of Therapeutic Communities in
the UK - Borderline Syndrome Index
- Lees, Evans, et al. (2006) Who comes into
therapeutic communities? A description of the
characteristics of a sequential sample of client
members admitted to 17 therapeutic communities
Therapeutic Communities 27(3) 411-433 - Lees, Evans, et al. (2005) A cross-sectional
snapshot of therapeutic community client members
Therapeutic Communities 26(3) 295-314
26Change boxplots men
27Change boxplots women
28Jacobson plot men
29Jacobson, women
30Cats cradle plot men
31Cats cradle men
32Cats cradle, men
33Cats cradle, women
34Cats cradle, women
35Cats cradle, women
36Cats cradle, women
37Idiographic hybrid measures
- Patient generated measures
- Problem rating target rating
- Personal questionnaire
- PSYCHLOPS (from MYMOPS)
- www.psychlops.org
- Ashworth, Robinson, et al. (2005) Measuring
mental health outcomes in primary care the
psychometric properties of a new
patient-generated outcome measure, 'Psychlops'
('Psychological Outcome Profiles') Primary care
mental health 3 261-270. - Ashworth, Evans, et al. (2009) Measuring
psychological outcomes after cognitive behaviour
therapy in primary care a comparison between a
new patient-generated measure PSYCHLOPS
(Psychological Outcome Profiles) and HADS
(Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale) Journal
of Mental Health 18(2) 169-177.
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40Conventional psychometrics
- 110 pre and post PSYCHLOPS from primary care
largely CBT interventions - Cronbach alpha t1 .79 and t2 .87 (cf. usual
.94/.95 for CORE-OM) - Change effect size large 1.53 cf. 1.06 for
CORE-OM (p lt.001) - Correlations with CORE-OM .48 to .61
41Conclusions
- Applying cross-sectional psychometric models
(same for IRT/Rasch) is hiding complexity in our
change data - Group summaries are hiding non-linearity and
diversity in change profiles - Nomothetic questionnaires should be complemented
with patient generated measures (PSYCHLOPS/PQ) - We need to stop hiding the complexity of our
therapies! - but we need a paradigm shift if were to manage
the organisational anxieties that provokes - and we need money and time to explore
complexity - and we wont get money/time without a paradigm
shift that answers questions
42Thanks!