Collaborative assessment as an intervention in the treatment of mental Illness: a systematic review
dataset posted on 2024-07-01, 19:00 authored by Oliver Rumle Hovmand, Jasmin Rejaye Gryesten, Ole Jakob Storebø, Nina Reinholt, Sidse M. Arnfred. Three meta-analyses suggested that the psychological assessment as a therapeutic intervention approach might have therapeutic effects but had unspecific inclusion criteria. We searched four databases for RCTs that reported on the use of psychological assessment as an intervention. Two reviewers independently selected papers, extracted data, and assessed study quality. We conducted and reported the systematic review following the PRISMA statement. We assessed the Risk of bias in included studies using the Risk of Bias tool and graded the strength of the evidence with GRADE. We included two RCTs: The first study investigated Therapeutic Assessment (TA) combined with Manual-Assisted Cognitive Behavior Therapy (MACT) compared with MACT only in 16 outpatients with personality disorders. The trial found among completers (n = 7) no difference in borderline symptomatology but a possible difference regarding suicidality favoring MACT + TA. The trial did not provide any outcomes relating to readiness for treatment. The other trial investigated TA compared with a Goal-focused Pretreatment Intervention in a sample of 74 outpatients with personality disorders. The results found no intervention effects on symptomatology but suggested that TA might improve patient expectancy for future treatment among completers of the intervention. Both trials were judged at a high risk of bias and with very low certainty of evidence. We found no support for the clinical effect of psychological assessment as a therapeutic intervention due to the high risk of bias and low certainty of the evidence.
Psychology Wiki Datasetpsychology_wiki数据集的构建基于心理学领域的英文维基百科内容,通过系统化的数据采集与整理,确保了信息的广泛覆盖与深度挖掘。数据集中的每一篇文章均经过严格的筛选与标注,涵盖了标题、正文、相关性、受欢迎程度及排名等多个维度,为心理学研究提供了丰富的文本资源。
This project implements the conversion algorithm from the ToMi dataset to the T4D (Thinking is for Doing) dataset, as introduced in the paper https://arxiv.org/abs/2310.03051. It filters examples with Theory of Mind (ToM) questions and adapts the algorithm to account for second-order false beliefs.
The Substance Abuse and Mental Health Data Archive (SAMHDA) provides a comprehensive collection of data sets related to mental health and substance use. It includes ongoing studies, population surveys, treatment facility surveys, and client-level data, offering valuable insights for researchers and policymakers.