Ending treatments:

The center has been involved in efforts in studying the process of ending treatment and the use of services.

  • Katz, S., Roe, D. (2018). Disengagement from mental health services as part of the process of building a life outside the illness. In From Rehabilitation and Recovery to Community Integration”. Editors: Naomi Haddass-Lidor & Max Lachman. Ono Academic College Publication (Hebrew Publication)
  • Katz, S., Sarfaty, S., Goldblatt, H., Ohayon-Hasson, I., & Roe, D. (2021). Fifty ways to leave your treatment: First person accounts of factors that helped actualize the choice to disengage from mental health services. Psychiatric Rehabilitation Journal
  • Roe, D. & Davidson, L. (2017). Noncompliance, Nonadherence, and dropout: Outmoded terms for modern recovery-oriented mental health. Psychiatric Services, 68(10), 1076-1078.
  • Roe, D., Gornemann, M.I & Hasson-Ohayon, I. (2016). Reasons for and experiences of people with serious mental illness who discontinued a manualized group intervention before completion. Psychiatric Services. 67 (9), 1043.
  • Roe, D. (2007). The Timing of Psychodynamically Oriented Psychotherapy Termination and its Relation to Reasons for Termination, Feelings About Termination, and Satisfaction With Therapy. The Journal of the American Academy of Psychoanalysis & Dynamic Psychiatry, 35(3), 443-453.
  • Roe, D., Dekel, R., Harel, G. , Fennig, S. & Fennig, S. (2006). Clients’ Feelings During Termination of Psychodynamically oriented psychotherapy. Bulletin of the Menninger Clinic, 70, 68-81.
  • Roe, D. Dekel, R., Harel, G., & Fennig, S. (2006). Clients’ reasons for terminating psychotherapy: A quantitative and qualitative inquiry. Psychology and psychotherapy: Theory, research and practice, 79, 529-538.