Abstract
Few evaluations have assessed the outcomes of group therapy for women abused by intimate partners. Most group programs emphasize support rather than offering therapy, although women abused by partners often present with significant clinical mental health issues. This paper describes, “You’re Not Alone,” a 14-week therapy group model for women abused by intimate partners informed by a narrative approach Jenkins (The Australian and New Zealand Journal of Family Therapy, 12 (4), 186-195 1991). The results present the demographic characteristics of the 379 women who began group, and a comparison of those who completed treatment (N = 214) versus those who dropped out (N = 165). Women with less income and a psychiatric history were less likely to complete group, as were women with higher depression, clinical stress, and mental health symptoms. The pretest/posttest outcome evaluation for the completers used measures of mental health symptoms, self-esteem, depression, and clinical stress, finding statistically significant improvements on most measures with moderate effect sizes. Practice implications and suggestions are presented.
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Notes
In many variables, the total is not 272, due to missing information.
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Thanks to the You’re Not Alone group leaders and research staff from the Calgary Counselling Centre. Most importantly, thanks to the women who participated in the You’re Not Alone groups.
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Tutty, L.M., Babins-Wagner, R.(. & Rothery, M.A. You’re Not Alone: Mental Health Outcomes in Therapy Groups for Abused Women. J Fam Viol 31, 489–497 (2016). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10896-015-9779-6
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10896-015-9779-6