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OBJECTIVE: This secondary analysis evaluates the impact of therapist memory on patient outcomes in the context of a randomized trial comparing cognitive therapy plus memory support (CT + Memory Support) to cognitive therapy as usual (CT-as-usual). METHOD: Participants were 172 adults (mean age SD = 37.46 15.31; 62.79% female; 59.88% Caucasian) with major depressive disorder. Patients were treated by 19 therapists (age mean SD = 28.4 5.95 years; 78.95% female; 42.11% Caucasian), with each therapist treating an average of 9 patients. Therapists completed cumulative and past session recall assessments immediately following sessions during weeks 4, 8, and 12, and the final session. Patient depression symptom severity (Inventory for Depressive Symptomatology Self-Report) and functional impairment (World Health Organization Disability Assessment Schedule 2.0) were self-reported at pre-treatment, post-treatment, 6-month (6FU), and 12-month follow-ups (12FU). RESULTS: Multilevel modeling revealed that better therapist cumulative recall predicted lower depression severity from pre-to post-treatment (unstandardized b = -3.43, p < 0.001) and at 6FU (b = -2.72, p < 0.001). Therapist cumulative recall predicted improved patient functional impairment in CT-as-usual only (b = 3.11, p = 0.02). Therapist past session recall (b = -2.68, p = 0.01) predicted improved functional impairment across treatment conditions. All other comparisons were non-significant, but the majority were in the hypothesized direction. CONCLUSIONS: These results signal a relationship between therapist memory and patient outcomes. Future research is needed to verify these findings and investigate ways to optimize therapist memory for treatment.
Callaway et al. (Mon,) studied this question.