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Dive into the research topics where Uwe Altmann is active.

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Featured researches published by Uwe Altmann.


Psychotherapy Research | 2015

Benefits and challenges in practice-oriented psychotherapy research in Germany: The TK and the QS-PSY-BAY projects of quality assurance in outpatient psychotherapy

Bernhard Strauss; Wolfgang Lutz; Andrés Steffanowski; Werner W. Wittmann; Jan R. Boehnke; Julian Rubel; Carl Eduard Scheidt; Franz Caspar; H. Vogel; Uwe Altmann; Rolf Steyer; Anna Zimmermann; Ellen Bruckmayer; Friedrich von Heymann; Dietmar Kramer; Helmut Kirchmann

Abstract Objective: Two patient-focused long-term research projects performed in the German outpatient psychotherapy system are focused on in this article. The TK (Techniker Krankenkasse) project is the first study to evaluate a quality assurance and feedback system with regard to its practical feasibility in German routine care. The other study (“Quality Assurance in Outpatient Psychotherapy in Bavaria”; QS-PSY-BAY) was designed to test a new approach for quality assurance in outpatient psychotherapy using electronic documentation of patient characteristics and outcome parameters. In addition this project provides the opportunity to analyze data on health-related costs for the patients undergoing outpatient psychotherapy. Method: Both projects and their results indicating high effect sizes are briefly described. Results: From the perspectives of the research teams, advisory boards and other stakeholders, the experiences with these projects are discussed focusing on obstacles, challenges, difficulties, and benefits in developing and implementing the studies. The triangle collaboration of therapists, researchers, and health insurance companies/health service institutions turned out to be fruitful in both studies. Conclusions: Despite some controversies between the partners the experiences indicate the importance of practiced-research collaborations to provide relevant information about the delivery of outpatient psychotherapy in the health system.


COST'10 Proceedings of the 2010 international conference on Analysis of Verbal and Nonverbal Communication and Enactment | 2010

Investigation of movement synchrony using windowed cross-lagged regression

Uwe Altmann

Movement synchrony is studied in various fields of research because the occurrence of movement synchrony correlates with the quality of interaction in terms of liking, rapport, and affiliation. Usually, movement synchrony is investigated with time series and a window-wise computed cross-lagged-correlation. This paper is concerned with the problem that (windowed) cross-lagged-correlation could be confounded by auto-correlation, which may lead to biased conclusions about movement synchrony. The proposed solution combines the idea of a window-wise computed measure and the methodological framework of autoregressive models. As shown through simulated time series, the new method is robust against auto-correlation and identifies the time lag and duration of movement synchrony correctly. At last, the method is applied to real time series of a pilot-study on childrens nonverbal behaviour. Friends vs. non-friends dyads are compared in neutral vs. conflict situations regarding the occurrence of movement synchrony.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Effectiveness of a Multimodal Therapy for Patients with Chronic Low Back Pain Regarding Pre-Admission Healthcare Utilization

Constanze Borys; Johannes Lutz; Bernhard Strauss; Uwe Altmann

Objective The aim of the study was to examine the effectiveness of an intensive inpatient three-week multimodal therapy. We focused especially on the impact on the multimodal therapy outcome of the pre-admission number of treatment types patients had received and of medical specialist groups patients had consulted. Methods 155 patients with chronic low back pain and indication for multimodal therapy were evaluated with respect to pain intensity, depression, anxiety, well-being, and pre-admission health care utilization. In our controlled clinical trial we compared N = 66 patients on the waiting list with N = 89 patients who received immediate treatment. The waiting list patients likewise attended multimodal therapy after the waiting period. Longitudinal post-treatment data for both were collected at three- and twelve-month follow-ups. The impact of pre-admission health care utilization on multimodal therapy outcome (post) was analysed by structural equation model. Results Compared to the control group, multimodal therapy patients’ pain intensity and psychological variables were significantly reduced. Longitudinal effects with respect to pre-measures were significant at three-month follow-up for pain intensity (ES = -0.48), well-being (ES = 0.78), anxiety (ES = -0.33), and depression (ES = -0.30). Effect sizes at twelve-month follow-up were small for anxiety (ES = -0.22), and moderate for general well-being (ES = 0.61). Structural equation model revealed that a higher number of pre-admission treatment types was associated with poorer post-treatment outcomes in pain intensity, well-being, and depression. Conclusion Multimodal therapy proved to be effective with regard to improvements in pain intensity, depression, anxiety, and well-being. The association between treatment effect and number of pre-admission pain treatment types suggests that patients would benefit more from attending multimodal therapy in an earlier stage of health care.


Journal of Affective Disorders | 2016

Social anxiety as a potential mediator of the association between attachment and depression

Susanne Manes; Steffi Nodop; Uwe Altmann; Romina Gawlytta; Ulrike Dinger; Wibke Dymel; Johannes C. Ehrenthal; Peter Joraschky; Björn Nolting; Katja Petrowski; Viktoria Ritter; Henning Schauenburg; Ulrich Stangier; Ulrike Willutzki; Bernhard Strauss

OBJECTIVE The study represents a conceptual replication of the study by Eng et al. (2001) in a sample of adult patients diagnosed with social anxiety disorder as primary diagnosis. METHODS Two different attachment questionnaires (Bielefeld Questionnaire of Client Expectations (BQCE) and Experiences in Close Relationships (ECR-RD)) were applied to examine whether the effect of attachment on depression (measured by the BDI) is mediated by social anxiety (measured by the LSAS) in a cross-sectional study. RESULTS The data confirms such a mediation. The effect of attachment measured with the BQCE on depression was completely mediated, whereas the effect of both scales of the ECR-RD (attachment related avoidance and anxiety) on depression was only partially mediated by social anxiety disorder. CONCLUSION The study supports the association of attachment, social anxiety, and depressive symptoms and the need to consider different perspectives on attachment.


Frontiers in Psychiatry | 2016

Outpatient Psychotherapy Reduces Health-Care Costs: A Study of 22,294 Insurants over 5 Years.

Uwe Altmann; Anna Zimmermann; Helmut Kirchmann; Dietmar Kramer; Andrea Fembacher; Ellen Bruckmayer; Irmgard Pfaffinger; Fritz von Heymann; Emma Auch; Rolf Steyer; Bernhard Strauss

Background The project “Quality Assurance in Ambulatory Psychotherapy in Bavaria” (QS-PSY-BAY) focuses on the quality assurance of outpatient psychotherapy (OPT) in Germany in terms of symptom reduction and cost reduction under naturalistic conditions. In this study, we examined the effectiveness of psychotherapy in terms of pre–post cost reduction. Method The health-care costs of N = 22,294 insurants over a 5-year period were examined in a naturalistic longitudinal design. Six participating health insurance funds provided data on costs related to inpatient treatment, outpatient treatment, drugs, and hospitalization and work disability days. Results We found that the average annual total costs for inpatient and outpatient treatments as well as drug costs and work disability days increased from the second to the first year before OPT. Besides a large and significant reduction of work disability days (41.8%), hospitalization days (27.4%), and inpatient costs (21.5%) from the first year before versus the first year following OPT, we found evidence for long-term effects: the number of work disability days in the second year after OPT was lower (23.8%), and drug costs were higher than in the second year before OPT (41.5%). Conclusion We conclude that OPT as a part of the health insurance system is an investment which can pay off in the future especially in terms of lower inpatient costs and work disability.


Psychotherapy Research | 2016

Pretreatment and process predictors of nonresponse at different stages of inpatient psychotherapy

Laurence Reuter; Thomas Munder; Uwe Altmann; Armin Hartmann; Bernhard Strauss; Carl Eduard Scheidt

Abstract Objective: Up to 50% of psychotherapeutic treatments end without significant improvements. While there is first evidence about predictors of nonresponse in outpatient psychotherapy, there are currently no studies investigating predictors of nonresponse in inpatient settings. Based upon a previous systematic literature review, we analyzed the predictive value of initial patient characteristics on nonresponse in symptom distress. Methods: Treatment episodes from 546 patients, treated for at least 4 weeks, were assessed under naturalistic conditions. Nonresponse status (i.e., lack of a reliable improvement in symptom distress) was investigated at four different time points: at week 4, at discharge, and at a two follow-ups (3 and 12 months after discharge). Hierarchical binary logistic regression models were used to predict nonresponse. Sociodemographic data, clinical variables, and the previous response status were entered subsequently in the model. Results: A moderate or functional level of initial symptom distress, a comorbid personality disorder, and previous nonresponse were the most consistent predictors of nonresponse. Conclusions: The results point to the importance of early outcome assessment and suggest the implementation of more symptom-specific treatments.


Psychiatrische Praxis | 2014

Abbrüche antragspflichtiger ambulanter Psychotherapien: Häufigkeit, Risikofaktoren, Outcome

Uwe Altmann; Werner W. Wittmann; Andrés Steffanowski; Friedrich von Heymann; Ellen Bruckmayer; Irmgard Pfaffinger; Emma Auch; Thomas Loew; Dietmar Kramer; Andrea Fembacher; Rolf Steyer; Anna Zimmermann; Bernhard Strauß

OBJECTIVE Because premature discontinuation of psychotherapy limits the effectiveness of the interventions, in a naturalistic design we examined the prevalence, predictors, and outcome of premature discontinuation. METHODS The sample included N = 584 patients with various mental disorders. Risk factors were identified using regression analysis. As outcome Patient Health Questionnaire scales were considered. We compared pre and post averages as well as post averages of premature discontinuation versus regular termination. RESULTS Risk factors were: female and/or unemployed patient, low patient and/or therapist ratings regarding therapy success, and extraordinarily high therapist ratings of the therapeutic alliance. Despite premature discontinuation we found significant reductions of depression, anxiety, somatic symptoms, and stress (ES = 0.30, …, 0.44). Compared to regular termination though, patients with premature discontinuation were more impaired at last measurement (ES = 0.17, …, 0.37). CONCLUSION Not each premature discontinuation is a psychotherapeutic failure. Warning signals for looming premature discontinuation are low ratings of therapy success while psychotherapeutic treatment.


Eating Behaviors | 2016

Psychometric properties of a short version of the Eating Attitudes Test (EAT-8) in a German representative sample

Felicitas Richter; Bernhard Strauss; Elmar Braehler; Uwe Altmann; Uwe Berger

PURPOSE Disordered eating is common for all ages and sexes in the general population. However, only some individuals are known to develop clinically relevant eating disorders. There is a critical need of efficient, reliable and valid screening instruments to measure disordered eating for the general population. The Eating Attitudes Test was shortened into an 8-item-version to screen individuals at high risk of developing clinical eating disorders in a general population sample. METHODS Psychometric properties (Cronbachs α, construct and concurrent validity and factor structure), cutoff scores (with sensitivity, specificity, positive and negative predictive value) and norms were determined in a representative sample of the German population (N=2527). Factorial validity was investigated using item response modeling. RESULTS Results confirmed reliability and validity of the questionnaire. Internal consistency and convergent validity were good. Analysis revealed different cutoff points for male and female participants. Values for sensitivity and specificity were satisfying and the positive predictive value was higher compared to other short screening instruments for disordered eating. Factorial analysis revealed a one-factor solution with an excellent model fit. The elimination of one item was discussed. Gender- and age-specific norms are reported. CONCLUSIONS Overall results indicated that the EAT-8 is an efficient instrument suitable for screening purposes in large general population samples.


Frontiers in Psychology | 2018

Outpatient Psychotherapy Improves Symptoms and Reduces Health Care Costs in Regularly and Prematurely Terminated Therapies

Uwe Altmann; Désirée Thielemann; Anna Zimmermann; Andrés Steffanowski; Ellen Bruckmeier; Irmgard Pfaffinger; Andrea Fembacher; Bernhard Strauß

Background: In view of a shortage of health care costs, monetary aspects of psychotherapy become increasingly relevant. The present study examined the pre-post reduction of impairment and direct health care costs depending on therapy termination (regularly terminated, dropout with an unproblematic reason, and dropout with a quality-relevant reason) and the association of symptom and cost reduction. Methods: In a naturalistic longitudinal study, we examined a disorder heterogeneous sample of N = 584 outpatients who were either treated with cognitive-behavioral, psychodynamic, or psychoanalytic therapy. Depression, anxiety, stress, and somatization were assessed with the Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ). Annual amounts of inpatient costs, outpatient costs, medication costs, days of hospitalization, work disability days, utilization of psychotherapy, and utilization of pharmacotherapy 1 year before therapy and 1 year after therapy were provided by health care insurances. Symptom and cost reduction were analyzed using t-tests. Associations between symptom and cost reduction were examined using partial correlations and hierarchical linear models. Results: Patients who terminated therapy regularly showed the largest symptom reduction (d = 0.981–1.22). Patients who dropped out due to an unproblematic reason and patients who terminated early due to a quality-relevant reason showed significant but small effects of symptom reductions (e.g., depression: d = 0.429 vs. d = 0.366). For patients with a regular end and those dropping out due to a quality-relevant reason, we observed a significant reduction of work disability (diff in % of pre-test value = 56.3 vs. 42.9%) and hospitalization days (52.8 vs. 35.0%). Annual inpatient costs decreased in the group with a regular therapy end (31.5%). Furthermore, reduction of symptoms on the one side and reduction of work disability days and psychotherapy utilization on the other side were significant correlated (r = 0.091–0.135). Conclusion: Health care costs and symptoms were reduced in each of the three groups. The average symptom and cost reduction of patients with a quality-relevant dropout suggested that not each dropout might be seen as therapy failure.


Psychotherapy | 2017

Partner-related attachment as a moderator of outcome in patients with social anxiety disorder—a comparison between short-term cognitive–behavioral and psychodynamic therapy.

Bernhard Strauss; Susan Koranyi; Uwe Altmann; Tobias Nolte; Manfred E. Beutel; Jörg Wiltink; Stephan Herpertz; Wolfgang Hiller; Jürgen Hoyer; Peter Joraschky; Björn Nolting; Ulrich Stangier; Ulrike Willutzki; Simone Salzer; Erik Leibing; Falk Leichsenring; Helmut Kirchmann

This study investigated whether partner-related attachment characteristics differentially predict premature treatment termination as well as posttreatment and 1-year follow-up outcome in patients with social anxiety disorder treated with a manualized cognitive–behavioral therapy (CBT) or short-term psychodynamic therapy (PDT) in the SOPHO-NET (Social Phobia Psychotherapy Network) trial. Participants were 412 patients with social anxiety disorder (57% female) with a mean age of 35.4 years (SD = 12.1) who were randomized to either CBT or PDT. Partner-related attachment characteristics were measured using the revised Experiences in Close Relationships Questionnaire (ECR-R) at pretreatment. The Liebowitz Social Anxiety Scale was administered at pretreatment, posttreatment, and a 1-year follow-up. To address our research questions, linear regression models were applied. Furthermore, we compared CBT versus PDT patients within ECR-R quartiles. Treatment dropout did not differ between CBT and PDT and was not predicted by pretreatment attachment. In both treatment conditions, there was a trend for higher attachment anxiety to be associated with a more limited reduction in symptoms if controlling for pretreatment Liebowitz Social Anxiety Scale scores. Exploratory analyses showed that patients assigned to the highest quartile of the ECR-R-Avoidance distribution showed more benefit within the CBT condition posttreatment and at follow-up than the PDT condition. Our findings suggest that it may be useful to assess attachment characteristics in patients with social anxiety disorder before psychotherapeutic treatment. Patients characterized by very high pretreatment attachment avoidance (ECR-R-Avoidance >3.87) may specifically benefit more from CBT than from PDT. However, replication studies are needed that also should investigate nonlinear effects of pretreatment attachment.

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Ulrich Stangier

Goethe University Frankfurt

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