The role of symptom accommodation in trauma‐focused treatment engagement and response

Author:

Howard Kristen P.12ORCID,Spoont Michele R.3456ORCID,Polusny Melissa A.56ORCID,Eftekhari Afsoon78,Rosen Craig S.789ORCID,Meis Laura A.4510ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Milwaukee VA Medical Center Milwaukee Wisconsin USA

2. Division of General Internal Medicine Medical College of Wisconsin Milwaukee Wisconsin USA

3. National Center for PTSD Pacific Islands Division Honolulu Hawaii USA

4. Department of Medicine University of Minnesota Medical School Minneapolis Minnesota USA

5. Center for Care Delivery and Outcomes Research, Minneapolis Veterans Affairs Health Care System Minneapolis Minnesota USA

6. Department of Psychiatry University of Minnesota Medical School Minneapolis Minnesota USA

7. National Center for PTSD Dissemination & Training Division, VA Palo Alto Health Care System Palo Alto California USA

8. VA Palo Alto Health Care System Palo Alto California USA

9. Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences Stanford University School of Medicine Stanford California USA

10. National Center for PTSD Women's Health Sciences Division Boston Massachusetts USA

Abstract

AbstractAlthough trauma‐focused treatments (TFTs) are generally effective, not all patients improve. Symptom accommodation (i.e., altering one's behavior in response to another's symptoms) by loved ones may be particularly relevant to TFT treatment response and engagement. We examined the role of symptom accommodation by support persons (SPs) in veterans’ PTSD treatment response, including the mediating role of treatment engagement and the moderating role of relationship strain. Veterans engaging in prolonged exposure or cognitive processing therapy and a loved one (N = 172 dyads) were sampled at two time points approximately four months apart. Measures of treatment engagement (i.e., highest session completed from the treatment protocol and homework completion) were obtained from hospital records. We found that relationship strain moderated the effect of symptom accommodation on treatment response, ∆R2 = .02. Specifically, Time 1 (T1) accommodation predicted poorer treatment response (i.e., Time 2 [T2] PTSD symptom severity, controlling for T1 symptoms) among veterans who reported below‐average relationship strain only. Additionally, symptom accommodation was indirectly related to treatment response such that T1 accommodation predicted higher T2 PTSD symptom severity specifically through reduced homework completion, β = .01. The findings suggest that attending to accommodating behaviors of veterans’ supportive partners may be an important way to boost both engagement in and response to TFTs for PTSD.

Funder

U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs

U.S. Department of Defense

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health,Clinical Psychology

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