Do therapist effects really impact estimates of within-patient mechanisms of change? A Monte Carlo simulation study.

Publication Type Academic Article
Authors Falkenström F, Solomonov N, Rubel J
Journal Psychother Res
Volume 30
Issue 7
Pagination 885-899
Date Published 06/02/2020
ISSN 1468-4381
Keywords Models, Psychological, Monte Carlo Method, Psychotherapists, Psychotherapy
Abstract Objective: Existing evidence highlights the importance of modeling differential therapist effectiveness when studying psychotherapy outcome. However, no study to date examined whether this assertion applies to the study of within-patient effects in mechanisms of change. The study investigated whether therapist effects should be modeled when studying mechanisms of change on a within-patient level. Methods: We conducted a Monte Carlo simulation study, varying patient- and therapist level sample sizes, degree of therapist-level nesting (intra-class correlation), balanced vs. unbalanced assignment of patients to therapists, and fixed vs random within-patient coefficients. We estimated all models using longitudinal multilevel and structural equation models that ignored (2-level model) or modeled therapist effects (3-level model). Results: Across all conditions, 2-level models performed equally or were superior to 3-level models. Within-patient coefficients were unbiased in both 2- and 3-level models. In 3-level models, standard errors were biased when number of therapists was small, and this bias increased in unbalanced designs. Ignoring random slopes led to biased standard errors when slope variance was large; but 2-level models still outperformed 3-level models. Conclusions: In contrast to treatment outcome research, when studying mechanisms of change on a within-patient level, modeling therapist effects may even reduce model performance and increase bias.
DOI 10.1080/10503307.2020.1769875
PubMed ID 32482144
PubMed Central ID PMC7526345
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