A pragmatic randomized controlled exploratory trial of the effectiveness of eye movement desensitization and reprocessing therapy for psychotic disorder
Study shows that EMDR can reduce the impact of traumatic events for patients with a psychotic disorder in a clinical setting in the UK.
Article Abstract
“Background: People with severe mental illness are often excluded from trials related to Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR) therapy. Principal concerns are that they may not tolerate treatment, might risk relapse or that psychotic symptoms may worsen. There is however building evidence of a traumatogenic etiology of psychotic disorder that may benefit therapeutically from EMDR. However, EMDR in this role is done mainly in specialist tertiary settings.
Aim: To conduct a randomized exploratory trial of prospective treatment of EMDR for people with psychotic disorder and a history of trauma in an adult community mental health service.
Methods: A randomized exploratory trial with a controlled pilot design was employed to conduct a prospective treatment and six-month follow-up study with an interim 10-week analysis in a rural county in the UK (population 538,000). We recruited participants with psychotic disorder who had a reported history of trauma and were interested in receiving trauma therapy. They were then randomized to either receive EMDR or treatment as usual (TAU). The primary instrument used was the Impact of Events Scale (IES) with secondary instruments of Positive and Negative Symptoms of Psychotic Disorder (PANSS), PTSD Checklist (PCL-C), and subjective Quality of Life (MANSA).
Results: IES scores showed significant improvements in the EMDR group (n = 24, age 42.0 SD (14.5), 42% male) compared to the TAU group (n = 12, age 34.4 SD (11.3), 50% male) at 10 weeks and at six months (p < 0.05). There were significant improvements in PCL-C and PANSS negative symptoms scores associated with treatment (p < 0.05). All other scales showed positive trends.
Conclusions: This study demonstrates that EMDR can reduce the impact of traumatic events for patients with a psychotic disorder in a clinical setting in the UK. The improvements in psychotic disorder persisted for six months after treatment.”
—Description from publisher
Article Access
Open Access
Marlow, S., Laugharne, R., Allard, J., Bassett, P., Priebe, S., Ledger, J., Kerr, J., Priest, D., Vanhoorn, A., Boland, C., & Shankar, R. (2023). A pragmatic randomized controlled exploratory trial of the effectiveness of eye movement desensitization and reprocessing therapy for psychotic disorder. Journal of Psychiatric Research, 169, 257-263. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jpsychires.2023.11.024
Date
November 18, 2023
Creator(s)
Simon Marlow, Richard Laugharne, Jon Allard
Contributor(s)
Paul Bassett, Stefan Priebe, Joanne Ledger, Jacqueline Kerr, Deborah Priest, Alje Vanhoorn, Cailin Boland, Rohit Shankar
Topics
Psychosis/Schizophrenia
Extent
7 pages
Publisher
Elsevier
Rights
© 2023 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd. This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
APA Citation
Marlow, S., Laugharne, R., Allard, J., Bassett, P., Priebe, S., Ledger, J., Kerr, J., Priest, D., Vanhoorn, A., Boland, C., & Shankar, R. (2023). A pragmatic randomized controlled exploratory trial of the effectiveness of eye movement desensitization and reprocessing therapy for psychotic disorder. Journal of Psychiatric Research, 169, 257-263. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jpsychires.2023.11.024
Audience
EMDR Therapists, Other Mental Health Professionals
Language
English
Content Type
Article, Peer-Reviewed, RCT
Access Type
External Resource, Open Access