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Dive into the research topics where Marcia Tummers is active.

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Featured researches published by Marcia Tummers.


Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology | 2010

Effectiveness of Stepped Care for Chronic Fatigue Syndrome: A Randomized Noninferiority Trial

Marcia Tummers; Hans Knoop; Gijs Bleijenberg

OBJECTIVE In this randomized noninferiority study, the effectiveness and efficiency of stepped care for chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) was compared to care as usual. Stepped care was formed by guided self-instruction, followed by cognitive behavior therapy (CBT) if the patient desired it. Care as usual encompassed CBT after a waiting period. METHOD A total of 171 CFS patients were randomly allocated to stepped care or care as usual. Patients in both conditions were assessed 3 times: at baseline, after guided self-instruction or the waiting period, and after CBT. The primary outcome variables were fatigue severity (Checklist Individual Strength) and disabilities (Sickness Impact Profile and Medical Outcomes Survey Short Form-36). RESULTS An intention to treat analysis showed that stepped care (N = 84) for CFS is noninferior to care as usual (N = 85). Both conditions were equivalent in reducing fatigue severity, reducing disabilities, and increasing physical functioning. The treatment results of both conditions were in accordance with those of previous randomized controlled trials testing the effectiveness of CBT for CFS. The total therapist time needed to treat a patient was significantly less in the stepped care condition. CONCLUSIONS Stepped care is as effective as CBT and is more time efficient for the therapist.


Journal of The European Academy of Dermatology and Venereology | 2015

Predictors of adalimumab drug survival in psoriasis differ by reason for discontinuation: long-term results from the Bio-CAPTURE registry.

J.M.P.A. van den Reek; Marcia Tummers; J. Zweegers; M.M.B. Seyger; P.P.M. van Lümig; R.J.B. Driessen; P.C.M. van de Kerkhof; Wietske Kievit; E.M.G.J. de Jong

Drug survival is an indicator for treatment success; insight in predictors associated with drug survival is important.


Journal of Psychosomatic Research | 2013

Moderators of the treatment response to guided self-instruction for chronic fatigue syndrome

Marcia Tummers; Hans Knoop; Arno van Dam; Gijs Bleijenberg

OBJECTIVE The efficiency and efficacy of guided self-instruction for chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) can be enhanced if it is known which patients will benefit from the intervention. This study aimed to identify moderators of treatment response. METHODS This study is a secondary analysis of two randomized controlled trials evaluating the efficacy of guided self-instruction for CFS. A sample of 261 patients fulfilling US Center for Disease Control and Prevention criteria for CFS was randomly allocated to guided self-instruction or a wait list. The following potential treatment moderators were selected from the literature: age, fatigue severity, level of physical functioning, pain, level of depressive symptoms, self-efficacy with respect to fatigue, somatic attributions, avoidance of activity, and focus on bodily symptoms. Logistic and linear regression analyses were used with interaction term between treatment response and the potential moderator. RESULTS Age, level of depression, and avoidance of activity moderated the response to guided self-instruction. Patients who were young, had low levels of depressive symptoms, and who had a low tendency to avoid activity benefited more from the intervention than older patients and patients with high levels of depressive symptoms and a strong tendency to avoid activity. CONCLUSION Guided self-instruction is exclusively aimed at cognitions and behaviours that perpetuate fatigue. Patients with severe depressive symptom may need more specific interventions aimed at the reduction of depressive symptoms to profit from the intervention. Therefore we suggest that patients with substantial depressive symptoms be directly referred to regular cognitive behaviour therapy.


Journal of Psychosomatic Research | 2013

Does neuropsychological test performance predict outcome of cognitive behavior therapy for Chronic Fatigue Syndrome and what is the role of underperformance

Martine M. Goedendorp; Sieberen P. van der Werf; Gijs Bleijenberg; Marcia Tummers; Hans Knoop

OBJECTIVE A subgroup of patients with Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (CFS) has cognitive impairments, reflected by deviant neuropsychological test performance. However, abnormal test scores can also be caused by suboptimal effort. We hypothesized that worse neuropsychological test performance and underperformance were related to each other and to a smaller reduction in fatigue, functional impairments, physical limitations and higher dropout rates following cognitive behavior therapy (CBT) for CFS. METHODS Data were drawn from a previous trial, in which CFS patients were randomized to two conditions; 1) guided self-instruction and additional CBT (n=84) or 2) waiting period followed by regular CBT for CFS (n=85). Underperformance was assessed using the Amsterdam Short Term Memory Test (<84). To test neuropsychological test performance, the Symbol Digit Modalities Task, a simple reaction time task and a choice reaction time task were used. Interaction effects were determined between underperformance and neuropsychological test performance on therapy outcomes. RESULTS Underperformance was associated to worse neuropsychological test performance, but there were no significant interaction effects of these two factors by therapy on fatigue severity, functional impairments and physical limitations, but there was a significant main effect of underperformance on functional impairments, physical limitations and dropout rates. CONCLUSION Underperformance or neuropsychological test performance was not related to the change in fatigue, functional impairments, and physical limitations following CBT for CFS. However, underperforming patients did drop out more often. Therapists should pay attention to beliefs and behavioral or environmental factors that might maintain underperformance and increase the risk of dropout.


Palliative Medicine | 2017

Lay and professional stakeholder involvement in scoping palliative care issues: Methods used in seven European countries

Louise Brereton; Christine Ingleton; Clare Gardiner; Elizabeth Goyder; Kati Mozygemba; Kristin Bakke Lysdahl; Marcia Tummers; Dario Sacchini; Wojciech Leppert; Aurelija Blaževičienė; Gert Jan van der Wilt; Pietro Refolo; Martina De Nicola; Jim Chilcott; Wija Oortwijn

Background: Stakeholders are people with an interest in a topic. Internationally, stakeholder involvement in palliative care research and health technology assessment requires development. Stakeholder involvement adds value throughout research (from prioritising topics to disseminating findings). Philosophies and understandings about the best ways to involve stakeholders in research differ internationally. Stakeholder involvement took place in seven countries (England, Germany, Italy, Lithuania, the Netherlands, Norway and Poland). Findings informed a project that developed concepts and methods for health technology assessment and applied these to evaluate models of palliative care service delivery. Aims: To report on stakeholder involvement in the INTEGRATE-HTA project and how issues identified informed project development. Design: Using stakeholder consultation or a qualitative research design, as appropriate locally, stakeholders in seven countries acted as ‘advisors’ to aid researchers’ decision making. Thematic analysis was used to identify key issues across countries. Setting/participants: A total of 132 stakeholders (82 professionals and 50 ‘lay’ people) aged ⩾18 participated in individual face-to-face or telephone interviews, consultation meetings or focus groups. Results: Different stakeholder involvement methods were used successfully to identify key issues in palliative care. A total of 23 issues common to three or more countries informed decisions about the intervention and comparator of interest, sub questions and specific assessments within the health technology assessment. Conclusion: Stakeholders, including patients and families undergoing palliative care, can inform project decision making using various involvement methods according to the local context. Researchers should consider local understandings about stakeholder involvement as views of appropriate and feasible methods vary. Methods for stakeholder involvement, especially consultation, need further development.


Clinical Psychology & Psychotherapy | 2014

Implementing Evidence‐Based Practice for Patients with Chronic Fatigue Syndrome

Jan F. Wiborg; Michel Wensing; Marcia Tummers; Hans Knoop; Gijs Bleijenberg

UNLABELLED The aim of our study was to explore whether community-based mental health care centres (MHCs) are able to implement and sustain cognitive behaviour therapy (CBT) for chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) with the help of an implementation manual. We monitored the implementation process and treatment outcome data of three Dutch MHCs that implemented or sustained CBT for CFS, one in the context of a stepped care programme. We compared these data with findings of other treatment studies conducted in the context of CBT for CFS. All three MHCs included at least 40 patients with dropout rates between 15% and 35% from intention-to-treat to second assessment. Effect sizes ranged between 0.88 and 1.76 for changes in fatigue severity and 0.43 and 1.23 for changes in physical functioning. With one exception, these outcomes were within the range of our benchmark. Contrary to original expectations, we provided additional implementation support to the two MHCs new with CBT for CFS. We concluded that our implementation manual does not seem to substitute external support for team leaders and associated professions during initial implementation of CBT for CFS but may have the potential to make this assistance more efficient. Particular attention should be paid to challenges of implementing stepped care for CFS. KEY PRACTITIONERS MESSAGE Implementation of CBT for CFS in community-based MHCs was monitored. External support was provided in addition to an implementation manual during initial implementation of CBT for CFS. Participating MHCs were generally capable of successfully implementing and delivering CBT for CFS. Implementation of low-intensity interventions for CFS might better be postponed until therapists have sufficient experience with conventional CBT for CFS.


Research Synthesis Methods | 2018

Towards a taxonomy of logic models in systematic reviews and health technology assessments: A priori, staged, and iterative approaches

Eva A. Rehfuess; Andrew Booth; Louise Brereton; Jacob Burns; Ansgar Gerhardus; Kati Mozygemba; Wija Oortwijn; Lisa Maria Pfadenhauer; Marcia Tummers; Gert Jan van der Wilt; Anke Rohwer

The complexity associated with how interventions result-or fail to result-in outcomes and how context matters is increasingly recognised. Logic models provide an important tool for handling complexity, with contrasting uses in programme evaluation and evidence synthesis. To reconcile these, we developed an approach that combines the strengths of both traditions, propose a taxonomy of logic models, and provide guidance on how to choose between approaches and types of logic models in systematic reviews and health technology assessments (HTA). The taxonomy distinguishes 3 approaches (a priori, staged, and iterative) and 2 types (systems-based and process-orientated) of logic models. An a priori logic model is specified at the start of the systematic review/HTA and remains unchanged. With a staged logic model, the reviewer prespecifies several points, at which major data inputs require a subsequent version. An iterative logic model is continuously modified throughout the systematic review/HTA process. System-based logic models describe the system, in which the interaction between participants, intervention, and context takes place; process-orientated models display the causal pathways leading from the intervention to multiple outcomes. The proposed taxonomy of logic models offers an improved understanding of the advantages and limitations of logic models across the spectrum from a priori to fully iterative approaches. Choice of logic model should be informed by scope of evidence synthesis, presence/absence of clearly defined population, intervention, comparison, outcome (PICO) elements, and feasibility considerations. Applications across distinct interventions and methodological approaches will deliver good practice case studies and offer further insights on the choice and implementation of logic modelling approaches.


Journal of Psychosomatic Research | 2017

Long-term follow-up after cognitive behaviour therapy for chronic fatigue syndrome☆

Anthonie Janse; Stephanie Nikolaus; Jan F. Wiborg; Marianne Heins; Jos W. M. van der Meer; Gijs Bleijenberg; Marcia Tummers; Jos W. R. Twisk; Hans Knoop

OBJECTIVE Cognitive behaviour therapy (CBT) is an effective treatment for chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS). Main aim was to determine whether treatment effects were maintained up to 10years after treatment. METHODS Participants (n=583) of previously published studies on the effects of CBT for CFS were contacted for a long-term follow-up assessment. They completed questionnaires on main outcomes fatigue severity (CIS) and physical functioning (SF-36). The course of these outcomes since post-treatment assessment was examined using mixed model analyses. RESULTS Between 21 and 125months after finishing CBT, 511 persons (response rate 88%) completed a follow-up assessment. At follow-up, mean fatigue severity was significantly increased to 37.60 (SD=12.76) and mean physical functioning significantly decreased to 73.16 (SD=23.56) compared to post-treatment assessment. At follow-up still 37% of the participants had fatigue scores in the normal range and 70% were not impaired in physical functioning. CONCLUSION Positive effects of CBT for CFS on fatigue and physical functioning were partly sustained at long-term follow-up. However, a subgroup of patients once again reported severe fatigue, and compromised physical functioning. Further research should elucidate the reasons for this deterioration to facilitate the development of treatment strategies for relapse prevention.


Journal of The American Academy of Dermatology | 2016

Adalimumab drug survival in patients with psoriasis, Crohn's disease, and rheumatoid arthritis: Relevant differences using the same treatment

Juul M.P.A. van den Reek; Philippe A.R.R. Pijls; Marcia Tummers; Piet C.L.M. van Riel; Wietske Kievit; Frank Hoentjen; Elke M. G. J. de Jong

and patient populations should be considered when making comparisons. A significant improvement was defined as either PASI 75 response or PGA of 0 or 1 in this study, whereas the previous study only used PASI 75. A major limitation is the retrospective nature of this study. Another limitation may be that treatments were not completely standardized, randomized, or blinded. However, the data presented here came from ‘‘real world’’ clinical practice, thus rendering this study a valuable addition to the relatively limited literature on this topic. In summary, our results suggest that after failure of 1 anti-TNF, most patients are still likely to respond well to another biologic.


Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology | 2016

The efficacy of guided self-instruction for patients with idiopathic chronic fatigue: A randomized controlled trial.

Anthonie Janse; Jan F. Wiborg; Gijs Bleijenberg; Marcia Tummers; Hans Knoop

OBJECTIVE To determine the efficacy of a cognitive-behavioral intervention for patients meeting U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) criteria for idiopathic chronic fatigue (ICF). ICF is thought to be a less severe disorder than chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS). The intervention consisted of a booklet with self-instructions combined with e-mail contact with a therapist. METHOD Randomized controlled trial conducted at an outpatient facility. All patients suffered from severe and persistent fatigue with moderate impairment levels or fewer than 4 additional symptoms. Patients were randomly allocated to either guided self-instruction or a wait-list control group. Primary outcome measures were fatigue severity assessed with the Checklist Individual Strength and level of overall impairment assessed with the Sickness Impact Profile. Outcome measures were assessed prior to randomization and following treatment or wait-list control group. RESULTS One hundred patients were randomly allocated to the intervention or a wait-list control group and 95 completed second assessment. An intention-to-treat analysis showed significant treatment effects for fatigue severity (-8.98, 95% confidence interval [CI] [-13.99, -3.97], Cohens d = 0.68, p < .001) and for overall impairment (-317.19, 95% CI [-481.70, -152.68], Cohens d = 0.53, p < .01) in favor of the intervention. The number of additional symptoms and overall impairment at baseline did not moderate posttreatment fatigue severity. Baseline overall impairment moderated posttreatment impairment. CONCLUSIONS Patients with ICF can be treated effectively with a minimal intervention. This is relevant as ICF is more prevalent than CFS and treatment capacity is limited.

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Pietro Refolo

Catholic University of the Sacred Heart

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Andrew Booth

University of Sheffield

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Dario Sacchini

Universidad de La Sabana

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Gijs Bleijenberg

Radboud University Nijmegen

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