Meta‐Analysis of Counseling Outcomes for the Treatment of Posttraumatic Stress Disorder |
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Authors: | Bradley T. Erford Chelsea Gunther Kelly Duncan Gerta Bardhoshi Beth Dummett Jennifer Kraft Katie Deferio Michelle Falco Margaret Ross |
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Affiliation: | 1. Education Specialties DepartmentLoyola University Maryland;2. Division of Counseling and PsychologyUniversity of South Dakota;3. Now at School of EducationNorthern University;4. Now at Department of Rehabilitation and Counselor EducationUniversity of Iowa |
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Abstract: | This meta‐analysis of 152 published posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) clinical trials from 1990 to 2012 concluded that counseling generally produced a small to large effect of treatment across all comparison conditions at termination (d+ = 0.30 to 0.89). These gains were maintained at longest follow‐up (d+ = 0.58 to 0.86) for the wait‐list, treatment‐as‐usual, and single‐group comparisons, but not for the follow‐up placebo comparison (d+ = 0.15), probably because of the low power (j = 3 placebo studies). Clinical trial findings were synthesized using a random‐effects model. No effects of publication bias or moderating variables were evident. No difference was found between trauma‐focused and non‐trauma‐focused approaches. Implications for counseling practice and future PTSD outcome research are addressed. |
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Keywords: | meta‐analysis posttraumatic stress disorder counseling |
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