P. Cuijpers, Netherlands

Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam Department of Clinical, Neuro and Developmental Psychology
Pim Cuijpers. Ph.D. is full professor of Clinical Psychology at the Department of Clinical, Neuro and Developmental Psychology, Amsterdam Public Health research institute, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, The Netherlands. He is also director of the WHO Collaborating Centre for Research and Dissemination of Psychological Interventions in Amsterdam. He is specialised in conducting randomised controlled trials and meta-analyses on prevention and psychological treatments of common mental disorders across the life span. Much of his work is aimed at prevention of mental disorders, psychological treatments of depression and anxiety disorders, and Internet-delivered treatments. He has also published on several other research topics, including global mental health, student mental health, and psycho-oncology. Pim Cuijpers has published more than 950 peer-reviewed papers, chapters, reports and professional publications, including almost 750 papers in international peer-reviewed scientific journals. He is on the Thomson-Reuter Web of Science lists of the ‘highly cited researchers’ since the first edition of this list in 2014 (http://highlycited.com/)

Presenter of 2 Presentations

LIVE - State of the Art: Targets and Outcomes of Psychotherapies for Mental Disorders (ID 603) No Topic Needed

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Live
Date
Mon, 12.04.2021
Session Time
16:15 - 17:00
Room
Channel 1
Lecture Time
16:40 - 17:00
LIVE - State of the Art: Targets and Outcomes of Psychotherapies for Mental Disorders (ID 603) No Topic Needed

SOA0004 - Targets and Outcomes of Psychotherapies for Mental Disorders

Session Icon
Live
Date
Mon, 12.04.2021
Session Time
16:15 - 17:00
Room
Channel 1
Lecture Time
16:15 - 16:40

ABSTRACT

Abstract Body

Because the causal pathways to mental disorders are largely unknown, it is also difficult to decide what the targets and outcomes of psychotherapies should be. In this presentation I will give an overview of the main types of targets and outcomes of therapies, as well as a brief overview of some of the main results of research on these types. The most important outcomes are symptom reduction, personal targets and outcomes from the patient’s perspective, improvement of quality of life, intermediate outcomes depending on the theoretical framework of the therapist, negative outcomes, and economic outcomes. By far the most research has focused on symptom reduction. In this presentation I will focus on psychotehrapies in general, but will illustrate the findings with research on psychotherapies for depression, because these have been examined most extensively. Furthermore, the perspective of different stakeholders will be presented: Patients, relatives, therapists, employers, health care providers and society at large each have their own perspectives on targets and outcomes. The perspective of patients should have more priority in research and standardization of measures across trials is much needed.

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