scholarly journals Penerapan Intervensi Picture Plus Discussion pada Anak Retardasi Mental Ringan

2021 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
pp. 101
Author(s):  
Sofina Tunnajah ◽  
Aniya Kartika ◽  
Lena N Panjaitan

Tujuan dari penelitian ini adalah untuk mengetahui pengaruh intervensi Picture Plus Discussion (PPD) dalam meningkatkan kemampuan pemahaman bacaan anak retardasi mental ringan. Penelitian ini menggunakan single case experimental design jenis A-B. Partisipan penelitian berjumlah tiga orang anak retardasi mental ringan. Partisipan dipilih berdasarkan kriteria tertentu yakni memiliki kemampuan membaca minimal pada tahap kata dan bersedia mengikuti proses intervensi dengan menandatangani inform consent. Pengumpulan data dilakukan dengan teknik wawancara, observasi, tes kecerdasan, tes informal akademik. Intervensi Picture Plus Discussion (PPD) dilakukan selama sepuluh kali pertemuan. Instrumen pengukuran menggunakan alat tes ASER. Pengukuran skor 1 atau 0 didasari oleh ketepatan partisipan dalam menjawab alat tes ASER. Follow up dilakukan sepuluh hari setelah dilakukan intervensi dengan memberikan 16 soal pertanyaan pemahaman teks bacaan. Hasil analisis data menunjukkan bahwa intervensi PPD dapat meningkatkan kemampuan pemahaman anak retardasi mental ringan. Median skor masing-masing partisipan mengalami kenaikan.

2014 ◽  
Vol 43 (1) ◽  
pp. 119-124 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ben Hague ◽  
Shonagh Scott ◽  
Stephen Kellett

Background: Despite the prevalence of co-morbid anxiety and depression in older adults, evaluation of suitable clinical models is rare. Aims: This study tested the acceptability and effectiveness of a transdiagnostic approach to treating co-morbid anxiety and depression in an older adults in a routine clinical setting. Method: In an A/B single case experimental design, a patient completed five daily ideographic measures of anxiety and depression across baseline and treatment and the HADS at five time points over time, including 3-month follow-up. The 8-session treatment was transdiagnostic CBT informed by the Unified Protocol. Results: All sessions were attended. Significant baseline-treatment improvements were found for daily structure, mood, confidence and worry, with large associated effect sizes. The HADS showed that the patient met recovery criteria by the end of treatment, with some evidence of anxious relapse at follow-up. Conclusion: Transdiagnostic CBT offers promise as a treatment approach to mixed anxiety and depression in older adults. The model needs to be further tested using more rigorous and suitably powered methodologies.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Renée E Klein Schaarsberg ◽  
Arne Popma ◽  
Ramón J L Lindauer ◽  
Levi van Dam

BACKGROUND Serious disruptive behaviour among adolescents is a prevalent and often persistent problem. This highlights the importance of adequate and effective treatment to help adolescents with disruptive behaviour problems react less hostile and aggressive. In order to create a treatment environment in which behavioural change can actually be enhanced, treatment motivation plays an essential role. Regarding treatment itself, a focus on challenging self-serving cognitive distortions in order to achieve behavioural change is important. Street Temptations (ST) is a new training program that was developed to address both treatment motivation and cognitive distortions in adolescents with disruptive behaviour problems. One of the innovative aspects of ST is the use of virtual reality (VR) techniques to provide adolescents during treatment with visually presented daily social scenarios to activate emotional engagement and dysfunctional cognitions. By using the VR scenarios as an integral starting point of ST’s sessions and transferring the power of the VR experience into playful and dynamic exercises to practice social perspective-taking, adolescents are encouraged to reflect on both their own behaviour as on that of others. This focus on reflection is grounded in ST’s main treatment mechanism to influence treatment motivation and cognitive distortions, namely mentalizing (i.e., reflective functioning). OBJECTIVE Describing the research protocol to evaluate the effects of ST on treatment motivation and cognitive distortions. We take a closer look at the use of ST and the methodology used, namely the repeated Single-Case Experimental Design (SCED). METHODS The effects of ST are studied through a multiple baseline Single-Case Experimental Design, using both quantitative and qualitative data. In total, 18 adolescents from secure residential youth care and secondary special education are randomly assigned to one of three different baseline conditions. Throughout a baseline phase (1, 2, or 3 weeks), intervention phase (4 weeks) and follow-up phase (1, 2 or 3 weeks), daily measurements on treatment motivation and cognitive distortions are conducted. Secondary study parameters are assessed before baseline, after intervention and after follow-up. Qualitative data is collected after intervention, as wells as 3 and 6 months after intervention. RESULTS Data collection for this study is planned to be completed by June 2023. The results will be published in peer-reviewed journals and presented at national and international conferences. CONCLUSIONS ST aims to improve disruptive behaviour problems of adolescents. The study described in this article will be the first to gain insight into the effectiveness of ST. Strengths of this study include its thorough and individually focused design (SCED), the focus on a residential as well as a secondary special education setting, and the ecological validity. Implications for practice are discussed. CLINICALTRIAL The study is registered at the Central Committee on Research Involving Human Subjects (NL75545.029.20, 24-06-2021) and the Netherlands Trial Register NL9639; https://www.trialregister.nl/trial/9639 (11-08-2021).


2008 ◽  
Vol 25 (4) ◽  
pp. 245-258 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sarah J. Egan ◽  
Paula Hine

AbstractPerfectionism can maintain depression, anxiety and eating disorders, yet few studies have evaluated treatments for perfectionism. This study examined the effectiveness of individual cognitive behaviour therapy (CBT) in treating perfectionism in four adults with a diagnosis of either an anxiety disorder or depression. The study used an A-B single case experimental design series with follow-up, and a 3-week pre- and postbaseline phase. Treatment involved 8 sessions and a 2-week follow-up session. Visual inspection of data revealed downward trends in overall perfectionism and clinically significant decreases in perfectionism for two participants. No clinically significant reductions were observed in depressive or anxious symptomatology. CBT for perfectionism warrants further investigation.


1985 ◽  
Vol 13 (1) ◽  
pp. 69-75 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alain Lesage ◽  
Yves Lamontagne

Two patients suffering from long-standing psychogenic nausea were treated by paradoxical intention and exposure in vivo within an A–BC–B–BC single case experimental design. Each received six treatment sessions. At the six month follow-up, both patients had improved substantially. Contrary to what was expected, paradoxical intention produced adverse outcome; both patients because nauseous and even vomited a few times while practicing the technique. Exposure in vivo gave better results.


2014 ◽  
Vol 15 (3) ◽  
pp. 190-201 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jacinta M. Douglas ◽  
Lucy Knox ◽  
Carren De Maio ◽  
Helen Bridge

Background and aims: Impaired communication is a well-documented and enduring consequence of traumatic brain injury (TBI). As a result of this impairment, people with TBI frequently experience communication breakdown and associated stress. Typically, we use communication-specific coping strategies in situations characterised by communication breakdown. Productive strategies enhance message transfer; non-productive strategies do little to resolve problems and frequently result in negative social interaction. This research aimed to evaluate the effectiveness of a new treatment, Communication-specific Coping Intervention (CommCope-I), which specifically targets coping in the context of communication breakdown.Method: Single-case experimental design (A–B–A with follow-up using multiple probes) across two participants was used. Participants were Samantha, a 30-year-old woman who had sustained severe TBI 8 years previously, and Thomas, a 34-year-old man who had sustained severe TBI when he was 29 years old. CommCope-I is a 6-week programme which targets personally relevant productive coping strategies identified collaboratively with the client. Productive coping scripts are developed and practised through a series of graded scenarios that are evaluated with the aid of video recording.Results: Percentage of non-overlapping corrected data (PNCD) was used to analyse the results. PNCD involves a data-correction procedure to remove baseline trend from the data series prior to calculating the change produced as a result of intervention. A large treatment effect was demonstrated in both participants (PNCD: end of treatment Samantha = 100%, Thomas = 100%, 3-month follow-up Samantha = 100%, Thomas = 100%). These results are consistent with highly effective treatment.Conclusions: This study provides sound phase-1 evidence for the effectiveness of CommCope-I.


2019 ◽  
Vol 28 (1S) ◽  
pp. 247-258
Author(s):  
Lisa D. Bunker ◽  
Christina Nessler ◽  
Julie L. Wambaugh

Purpose With a number of single-case experimental design studies reporting the effects of treatment for response (and modified response) elaboration training (RET/M-RET), it is important to consolidate data over multiple participants to allow comparison within/between individuals and across similar treatments. The purpose of this study was to conduct a meta-analysis of single-case experimental design studies of RET/M-RET and to determine effect size (ES) benchmarks to allow comparison to “group” data. Method Database and bibliographical searches identified 20 investigations of RET/M-RET. Nine studies had sufficient experimental quality, compliance with the essential components of the RET protocol, and consistency in the dependent variable (i.e., accurate content production in response to picture stimuli) to be retained for the meta-analysis. Probe data for a total of 26 persons with aphasia (PWA) were extracted from published graphs (if raw data were not available) to calculate weighted ESs at the end of treatment and at follow-up for both treated and untreated stimuli. The first, second, and third quartiles of the distributions were used to serve at benchmarks for small, medium, and large effects. Results Nearly all participants demonstrated positive effects as a result of RET/M-RET, indicating an association with positive changes in content production for PWA. Small, medium, and large benchmarks are reported for treated items after treatment and at follow-up, as well as for untreated items after treatment and at follow-up. Conclusions With a larger sample of 26 participants, this analysis indicates that RET/M-RET are associated with positive changes in content production for PWA. ES benchmarks allow clinicians/researchers to compare an individual's performance across multiple applications of treatment to performance of other PWA and to other treatments with similar outcomes.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Edwin Raaij ◽  
Harriet Wittink ◽  
Francois maissan ◽  
Jos Twisk ◽  
Raymond Ostelo

Abstract IntroductionIllness Perceptions (IPs) may be important in the management of persistent low back pain. The mediation and/or moderation effect of IPs on primary outcomes in physiotherapy treatment is unknown. MethodsA multiple single-case experimental design, using a matched care physiothetapy intervention, with 3 phases (phases A-B-A’) was used including a 3-month follow up (phase A’). Primary outcomes: pain intensity, physical functioning and pain interference in daily life. Analyzes: linear mixed models, adjusted for fear of movement, catastrophizing, avoidance, sombreness and sleep. ResultsNine patients were included by six different primary care physiotherapists. Repeated measures on 196 data points showed that IPs Consequences, Personal control, Identity, Concern and Emotional response had a mediation effect on all three primary outcomes. The IP Personal control acted as a moderator for all primary outcomes, with clinically relevant improvements at 3-month follow up.ConclusionThis is the first study to shed some light in the mediating effects of IPs on the outcome of a matched care physiotherapy treatment. At baseline, assessing Personal control is relevant to determine the outcome prognosis of successful physiotherapy management of persistent low back pain.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Da-Wei Zhang ◽  
Stuart J. Johnstone ◽  
Hui Li ◽  
Xiangsheng Li ◽  
Li Sun

The current study used behavioral and electroencephalograph measures to compare the transferability of cognitive training (CT), neurofeedback training (NFT), and CT combined with NFT in children with AD/HD. Following a multiple-baseline single-case experimental design, twelve children were randomized to a training condition. Each child completed a baseline phase, followed by an intervention phase. The intervention phase consisted of 20 sessions of at-home training. Tau-U analysis and standardized visual analysis were adopted to detect effects. CT improved inhibitory function, and NFT showed improved alpha activity and working memory. The combined condition, who was a reduced 'dose' of CT and NFT, did not show any improvements. The three conditions did not alleviate AD/HD symptoms. While CT and NFT may have near transfer effects, considering the lack of improvement in symptoms, this study does not support CT and NFT on their own as a treatment for children with AD/HD.


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