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Does cognitive behavioural therapy or mindfulness-based therapy improve mental health and emotion regulation among men who perpetrate intimate partner violence? A randomised controlled trial.

International journal of nursing studies
January 1, 2021
Merete Berg Nesset et al. (4 authors)
Journal ArticleRandomized Controlled TrialHuman StudyClinical
Study Details

Study Goal

The researchers aimed to compare the effectiveness of mindfulness-based stress reduction group therapy versus cognitive-behavioural group therapy in improving mental health outcomes and emotion regulation among perpetrators of intimate partner violence.

Results Summary

Both mindfulness-based stress reduction and cognitive-behavioural therapy groups showed small but statistically significant reductions in anxiety, depression, and emotion regulation difficulties at 12 months, with no significant differences between the two interventions. However, symptom scores remained high in both groups.

Population

Men who perpetrate intimate partner violence and voluntarily sought help at an outpatient service in Norway.

Effective Dosage

Not specified

Duration

12 months

Interactions

None mentioned

Extracted Claims (4)
InterventionDirectionEndpointPopulationDosageImpactClaim #
nurse-led cognitive-behavioural group therapy
decrease
symptoms of anxiety and depression
perpetrators who voluntarily seek help for violence in intimate partnerships
coefficient: - 0.17
A reduction of symptoms of anxiety and depression was reported
#1
mindfulness-based stress reduction group therapy
decrease
symptoms of anxiety and depression
perpetrators who voluntarily seek help for violence in intimate partnerships
coefficient: - 0.13
A reduction of symptoms of anxiety and depression was reported
#2
nurse-led cognitive-behavioural group therapy
decrease
Difficulties in Emotion Regulation Scale scores
perpetrators who voluntarily seek help for violence in intimate partnerships
coefficient: - 0.47
a small but statistically significant reduction
#3
mindfulness-based stress reduction group therapy
decrease
Difficulties in Emotion Regulation Scale scores
perpetrators who voluntarily seek help for violence in intimate partnerships
coefficient: - 0.34
a small but statistically significant reduction
#4
Abstract

BACKGROUND: Intimate partner violence constitutes a serious health problem worldwide. To date the evidence is sparse on whether intimate partner violence group interventions could improve mental health outcomes among perpetrators and their partners. OBJECTIVES: To compare the effectiveness of nurse-led cognitive-behavioural group therapy vs. mindfulness-based stress reduction group therapy in improving reported mental health outcomes and emotion regulation at 12 months' follow-up amongst perpetrators who voluntarily seek help for violence in intimate partnerships. DESIGN: A randomised controlled trial. PARTICIPANTS: A total of 125 persons at an outpatient service run by a University Hospital in Norway for men who perpetrate intimate partner violence were enroled in the study. METHODS: The participants were randomly assigned to cognitive-behavioural group therapy (intervention group, N = 67) or mindfulness-based stress reduction group therapy (comparator group, N = 58). The pre-defined outcomes were symptoms of anxiety and depression as reported by the Hopkins Symptom Checklist 25 and general emotion regulation as reported by Difficulties in Emotion Regulation Scale at 12 months' follow-up. RESULTS: A reduction of symptoms of anxiety and depression was reported, with no between-group differences (intervention group: coefficient: - 0.17, P = 0.009; comparator group: coefficient: - 0.13, P = 0.036). Both groups had a small but statistically significant reduction in the Difficulties in Emotion Regulation Scale scores at 12 months' follow-up (intervention group: coefficient: - 0.47, P = <0.001; comparator group: coefficient: - 0. 34, P = <0.001). CONCLUSION: Even though there was reduction in symptoms in both groups at 12 months' follow-up with no between-group differences, the total symptom scores remained high in both groups. TRIAL REGISTRATION: clinicaltrials.gov Identifier: NCT01653860.

Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
Cognitive Behavioral TherapyEmotional RegulationHumansIntimate Partner ViolenceMaleMental HealthMindfulnessNorway
Study Links
Quality Scores
SafetyNot Assessed
Efficacy65/10
Quality80/10
Citation Metrics
Total Citations10
Citations/Year2.5
Relative Citation Ratio1.13
NIH Percentile54.9%
Research Impact Scores
APT Score0.50
Weight Score2.47
Normalized Score0.62
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