Women-only versus mixed-gender groups in multimodal, day clinic treatment of trauma-related disorders

Philipps A, Hepp T, Silbermann A, Morawa E, Stemmler M, Erim Y (2022)


Publication Type: Journal article

Publication year: 2022

Journal

Book Volume: 68

Pages Range: 378-396

Journal Issue: 4

DOI: 10.13109/zptm.2022.68.4.378

Abstract

Background: In the German healthcare system benefits include inpatient and day clinic psychotherapy of trauma-related disorders, which are often provided in gender specific groups. Despite this widespread practice, the actual impact and potential outcome have been studied relatively scarcely and are still open to debate. The present study therefore examines whether the therapeutic relationships in the group vary depending on the group composition and whether this has an effect on therapy outcome. Methods: 66 patients (N = 55 women) were treated in our multimodal, day clinic groupbased treatment program and filled out symptom questionnaires (ETI, BDI-II, PHQ-15, Questionnaire on social support) at admission and discharge and the Group Questionnaire (GQ; including subscales positive bonding, positive working and negative relationships) at the end of each of the eight weeks of treatment. Patients took part in five women-only and six mixed-gender groups and underwent therapy in a closed group format, so that they began and ended therapy within the same group. All patients were diagnosed with trauma-related disorders, which included PTSD, cPTSD, depression, somatoform disorders and further mental diseases. Outcome data were examined using functional regression analysis and linear mixed models. Results: In women-only groups, positive bonding and positive working relationship were significantly higher than in mixed-gender groups. Negative relationship ratings were significantly lower in women-only groups, especially in the middle phase of treatment. However, no effect of an exclusively female group composition on treatment outcome was found, except for the higher increase of perceived social support for patients treated in women-only groups. Conclusions: Group relationships were considered more pleasant in women-only groups than in mixed-gender groups, but this had no effect on the symptom-based therapy outcome. To enhance feelings of safety and comfort, traumatized women should have the possibility to choose whether to be treated in a women-only or a mixed-gender group.

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How to cite

APA:

Philipps, A., Hepp, T., Silbermann, A., Morawa, E., Stemmler, M., & Erim, Y. (2022). Women-only versus mixed-gender groups in multimodal, day clinic treatment of trauma-related disorders. Zeitschrift für Psychosomatische Medizin und Psychotherapie, 68(4), 378-396. https://doi.org/10.13109/zptm.2022.68.4.378

MLA:

Philipps, Anke, et al. "Women-only versus mixed-gender groups in multimodal, day clinic treatment of trauma-related disorders." Zeitschrift für Psychosomatische Medizin und Psychotherapie 68.4 (2022): 378-396.

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