On 2017 Nov 03, Elisabeth Schramm commented:
In reply to a comment by Falk Leichsenring
Allegiance effects controlled
Elisabeth Schramm, PhD; Levente Kriston, PhD; Ingo Zobel, PhD; Josef Bailer, PhD; Katrin Wambach, PhD; Matthias Backenstrass, PhD; Jan Philipp Klein, MD; Dieter Schoepf, MD; Knut Schnell, MD; Antje Gumz, MD; Paul Bausch, MSc; Thomas Fangmeier, PhD; Ramona Meister, MSc; Mathias Berger, MD; Martin Hautzinger, PhD; Martin Härter,MD, PhD
Corresponding Author: Elisabeth Schramm, PhD, Department of Psychiatry, Faculty of Medicine, University of Freiburg, Hauptstrasse 5, 79104 Freiburg, Germany (elisabeth.schramm@uniklinik-freiburg.de)
We acknowledge the comment of Drs. Steinert and Leichsenring (1) on our study (2) reasoning that our findings may at least in part be attributed to allegiance effects. Unfortunately, they provide neither a clarification of what they exactly refer to with the term “allegiance effects” nor a specific description of the presumed mechanisms (chain of effects) through which they think allegiance may have influenced our results. In fact, as specified both in the trial protocol (3) and the study report (2), we took a series of carefully safeguarded measures to minimize bias. Unlike stated in the comment, training and supervision of the study therapists and the center supervisors were performed by qualified and renowned experts for both investigated approaches (Martin Hautzinger for Supportive Psychotherapy and Elisabeth Schramm for Cognitive Behavioral Analysis System of Psychotherapy). Moreover, none of them has been involved in treating any study patients in this trial. We are confident that any possible allegiance of the participating researchers, therapists, supervisors, or other involved staff towards any, both, or none of the investigated interventions is very unlikely to have been able to surmount all of the implemented measures against bias and to affect the results substantially.
References
(1) Steinert C, Leichsenring F. The need to control for allegiance effects in psychotherapy research. PubMed Commons. Sep 08 2017
(2) Schramm E, Kriston L, Zobel I, Bailer J, Wambach K, Backenstrass M, Klein JP, Schoepf D, Schnell K, Gumz A, Bausch P, Fangmeier T, Meister R, Berger M, Hautzinger M, Härter M. Effect of Disorder-Specific vs Nonspecific Psychotherapy for Chronic Depression: A Randomized Clinical Trial. JAMA Psychiatry. Mar 01 2017; 74(3): 233-242
(3) Schramm E, Hautzinger M, Zobel I, Kriston L, Berger M, Härter M. Comparative efficacy of the Cognitive Behavioral Analysis System of Psychotherapy versus supportive psychotherapy for early onset chronic depression: design and rationale of a multisite randomized controlled trial. BMC Psychiatry. 2011;11:134
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