Journal of Clinical Nursing

Volume 24, Issue 15-16
Review

Nursing psychotherapeutic interventions: a review of clinical studies

Francisco Miguel Correia Sampaio

Corresponding Author

PhD Student, Registered Mental Health Nurse, Invited Assistant

Instituto de Ciências Biomédicas Abel Salazar, Universidade do Porto, Porto, Portugal

Hospital de Braga‐Psychiatry Department, Braga, Portugal

Porto Nursing School, Porto, Portugal

Member of ‘The Portuguese Society of Mental Health Nursing' Management Board.

Correspondence: Francisco Miguel Correia Sampaio, PhD Student, Registered Mental Health Nurse at Hospital de Braga – Psychiatry Department, Sete Fontes, 4710‐243 São Victor, Braga, Portugal. Telephone: +351253027000.

E‐mail:Francisco.Sampaio@hospitaldebraga.pt

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Carlos Alberto da Cruz Sequeira RMHN, MSc, PhD

Associate Professor, Coordinator of the Research Group

Porto Nursing School‐Scientific Pedagogical Unit “Nursing: Discipline & Profession”, Porto, Portugal

”NurID: Innovation & Development in Nursing” – CINTESIS‐FMUP, Porto, Portugal

President of ‘The Portuguese Society of Mental Health Nursing’.Search for more papers by this author
María Teresa Lluch Canut RMHN, PhD

Full Professor of Psychosocial Nursing and Mental Health

Barcelona University School of Nursing, Department of Public Health and Perinatal Nursing, Barcelona, Spain

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First published: 28 March 2015
Cited by: 5

Abstract

Aims and objectives

To summarise current knowledge about nursing psychotherapeutic interventions in adults.

Background

In Portugal, the provision of psychotherapeutic interventions is considered a competence of mental health nurses. However, literature is not totally clear about the differences between ‘psychotherapy’ and ‘psychotherapeutic interventions’ and about the specific characteristics that define a nursing psychotherapeutic intervention.

Design

Narrative review.

Methods

A literature review utilising MEDLINE, PsycINFO, CINAHL, the Web of Science, Psychology and Behavioral Sciences Collection, and MedicLatina computerised databases for the period from 2003–2013. A total of 151 eligible articles were identified. Relevant data were extracted, and findings were synthetised in a narrative synthesis.

Results

Nursing psychotherapeutic interventions are frequently based on ‘Cognitive‐Behavioural’ rationale. The usual length of these interventions varies between 5–16 weeks, in a total of 5–12 sessions of 45–60 minutes. The mechanisms of change are heterogeneous, but the therapeutic relationship between the nurse and the client seems to be the most important positive predictive factor of nursing psychotherapeutic interventions. Some of the most used outcome assessment measures include the Beck Depression Inventory, the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale, and the CORE‐OM. The effectiveness of nursing psychotherapeutic interventions has been widely demonstrated in many studies. However, the need of further studies to prove its cost effectiveness is evident.

Conclusions

It is necessary to have a better understanding of nursing psychotherapeutic interventions, one that explains its conceptual limits, to improve mental health nursing knowledge and create suitable models of psychotherapeutic intervention in nursing.

Relevance to clinical practice

The findings of this review can create awareness for some weaknesses of nursing knowledge about the psychotherapeutic intervention and for the need to produce knowledge, to nurture the nursing discipline in the area of psychotherapeutic intervention with even more theoretical and practical support.

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