Busy therapists: Examining caseload as a potential factor in outcome.

As demand increased for mental health services, especially in university counseling centers, providers have seen increasing numbers of clients. The effect of this increase on therapist caseloads is explored, with a recognition that past research on therapist caseloads lacks direct and fluctuating measures of caseload that reflect practice in naturalistic settings. Using a large dataset from a counseling center (N = 18,322), therapist caseload was conceptualized dynamically over rolling 30-day periods, using within-therapist counts of therapy sessions, unique clients seen, and the proportion of unique clients to sessions. Analysis of variance was used first to test for differences in caseload between months, years, then to test for differences between therapists (n = 173). Hierarchical linear models were constructed to examine the relationship between changes in therapist caseload across time and client outcome. Logistic and ordinal regression approaches were used to further examine this relationship for clinically significant change. Results included finding a small, but significant, effect of therapist caseload on outcome, with this finding discussed in the context of the effect sizes in the literature on therapist effects. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved)
Source: Psychological Services - Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Source Type: research