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Mechanisms of Action of Combination Motivational Interviewing-Cognitive Behavior Therapy for Reversing Medication Non-adherence in Patients with Multiple Sclerosis
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  • Rachel Schoor,
  • Jared Bruce,
  • Vincent S. Staggs,
  • Andrew T. Fox,
  • Amanda Bruce,
  • Sharon Lynch,
  • Delwyn Catley
Rachel Schoor
University of Missouri-Kansas City Department of Psychology

Corresponding Author:rachel_schoor@ymail.com

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Jared Bruce
University of Missouri-Kansas City
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Vincent S. Staggs
Center for Children's Healthy Lifestyles & Nutrition
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Andrew T. Fox
Children's Mercy Kansas City
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Amanda Bruce
Center for Children's Healthy Lifestyles & Nutrition
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Sharon Lynch
The University of Kansas Department of Neurology
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Delwyn Catley
Center for Children's Healthy Lifestyles & Nutrition
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Abstract

Objective: Despite disease modifying therapies’ (DMT) demonstrated efficacy for treating relapsing MS, around 40% of patients discontinue use. This study aimed to understand the mechanism of action of Motivational Interviewing plus cognitive behavioral therapy (MI-CBT) in a previously conducted randomized controlled trial in which the MI-CBT intervention successfully promoted DMT re-initiation of participants compared to a treatment as usual (TAU) condition. Method: This secondary analysis (N=91) explored changes in motivation (a single item motivation “ruler” [Mot ∆], and the Brief Motivation Scale [BMS∆]), autonomous motivation (AR∆), personal control (PC∆), treatment control (TC∆), and confidence to re-initiate (Con∆) as potential mediators of the treatment effect, using logistic regression. Results: Logistic regression analysis including all potential mediators as predictors of initiation indicated the BMS∆ was the only statistically significant predictor (OR = 1.61, p = .010). When BMS∆ was removed Mot∆ (OR = 1.22 , p = .002) and PC∆ (OR = 1.67, p = .002) were statistically significant predictors of initiation. The MI-CBT intervention appeared to work primarily by increasing motivation to initiate DMT.
Submitted to Journal of Clinical Psychology
19 Jun 2024Review(s) Completed, Editorial Evaluation Pending
12 Nov 2024Editorial Decision: Revise Minor
29 Dec 20241st Revision Received
31 Dec 2024Submission Checks Completed
31 Dec 2024Assigned to Editor
31 Dec 2024Review(s) Completed, Editorial Evaluation Pending
07 Jan 2025Reviewer(s) Assigned