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Component analysis of a synchronous and asynchronous blended care CBT intervention for symptoms of depression and anxiety: Pragmatic retrospective study

BACKGROUND: Depression and anxiety are leading causes of disability worldwide. Though effective treatments exist, depression and anxiety remain undertreated. Blended care psychotherapy, combining the scalability of online interventions with the personalization and engagement of a live therapist, is...

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Autores principales: Lungu, Anita, Wickham, Robert E., Chen, Shih-Yin, Jun, Janie J., Leykin, Yan, Chen, Connie E.-J.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9011163/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35433277
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.invent.2022.100536
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author Lungu, Anita
Wickham, Robert E.
Chen, Shih-Yin
Jun, Janie J.
Leykin, Yan
Chen, Connie E.-J.
author_facet Lungu, Anita
Wickham, Robert E.
Chen, Shih-Yin
Jun, Janie J.
Leykin, Yan
Chen, Connie E.-J.
author_sort Lungu, Anita
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Depression and anxiety are leading causes of disability worldwide. Though effective treatments exist, depression and anxiety remain undertreated. Blended care psychotherapy, combining the scalability of online interventions with the personalization and engagement of a live therapist, is a promising approach for increasing access to evidence-based care. OBJECTIVES: To evaluate the effectiveness and individual contribution of two components - i) digital tools and ii) video-based therapist-led sessions - in a blended care CBT-based intervention under real world conditions. METHODS: A retrospective cohort design was used to analyze N = 1372 US-based individuals who enrolled in blended care psychotherapy. Of these, at baseline, 761 participants had depression symptoms in the clinical range (based on PHQ-9), and 1254 had anxiety symptoms in the clinical range (based on GAD-7). Participants had access to the program as a mental health benefit offered by their employer. The CBT-based blended care psychotherapy program consisted of regular video sessions with therapists, complemented by digital lessons and digital exercises assigned by the clinician and completed in between sessions. Depression and anxiety levels and clients' treatment engagement were tracked throughout treatment. A 3-level individual growth curve model incorporating time-varying covariates was utilized to examine symptom trajectories of PHQ-9 scores (for those with clinical range of depression at baseline) and GAD-7 scores (for those with clinical range of anxiety at baseline). RESULTS: On average, individuals exhibited a significant decline in depression and anxiety symptoms during the initial weeks of treatment (P < .001), and a continued decline over subsequent weeks at a slower rate (P < .001). Engaging in a therapy session in a week was associated with lower GAD-7 (b = −0.81) and PHQ-9 (b = −1.01) scores in the same week, as well as lower GAD-7 (b = −0.58) and PHQ-9 (b = −0.58) scores the following week (all P < .01). Similarly, engaging with digital lessons was independently associated with lower GAD-7 (b = −0.19) and PHQ-9 (b = −0.18) scores during the same week, and lower GAD-7 (b = −0.25) and PHQ-9 (b = −0.27) the following week (all P < .01). CONCLUSIONS: Therapist-led video sessions and digital lessons had separate contributions to improvements in symptoms of depression and anxiety over the course of treatment. Future research should investigate whether clients' characteristics are related to differential effects of therapist-led and digital components of care.
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spelling pubmed-90111632022-04-16 Component analysis of a synchronous and asynchronous blended care CBT intervention for symptoms of depression and anxiety: Pragmatic retrospective study Lungu, Anita Wickham, Robert E. Chen, Shih-Yin Jun, Janie J. Leykin, Yan Chen, Connie E.-J. Internet Interv Full length Article BACKGROUND: Depression and anxiety are leading causes of disability worldwide. Though effective treatments exist, depression and anxiety remain undertreated. Blended care psychotherapy, combining the scalability of online interventions with the personalization and engagement of a live therapist, is a promising approach for increasing access to evidence-based care. OBJECTIVES: To evaluate the effectiveness and individual contribution of two components - i) digital tools and ii) video-based therapist-led sessions - in a blended care CBT-based intervention under real world conditions. METHODS: A retrospective cohort design was used to analyze N = 1372 US-based individuals who enrolled in blended care psychotherapy. Of these, at baseline, 761 participants had depression symptoms in the clinical range (based on PHQ-9), and 1254 had anxiety symptoms in the clinical range (based on GAD-7). Participants had access to the program as a mental health benefit offered by their employer. The CBT-based blended care psychotherapy program consisted of regular video sessions with therapists, complemented by digital lessons and digital exercises assigned by the clinician and completed in between sessions. Depression and anxiety levels and clients' treatment engagement were tracked throughout treatment. A 3-level individual growth curve model incorporating time-varying covariates was utilized to examine symptom trajectories of PHQ-9 scores (for those with clinical range of depression at baseline) and GAD-7 scores (for those with clinical range of anxiety at baseline). RESULTS: On average, individuals exhibited a significant decline in depression and anxiety symptoms during the initial weeks of treatment (P < .001), and a continued decline over subsequent weeks at a slower rate (P < .001). Engaging in a therapy session in a week was associated with lower GAD-7 (b = −0.81) and PHQ-9 (b = −1.01) scores in the same week, as well as lower GAD-7 (b = −0.58) and PHQ-9 (b = −0.58) scores the following week (all P < .01). Similarly, engaging with digital lessons was independently associated with lower GAD-7 (b = −0.19) and PHQ-9 (b = −0.18) scores during the same week, and lower GAD-7 (b = −0.25) and PHQ-9 (b = −0.27) the following week (all P < .01). CONCLUSIONS: Therapist-led video sessions and digital lessons had separate contributions to improvements in symptoms of depression and anxiety over the course of treatment. Future research should investigate whether clients' characteristics are related to differential effects of therapist-led and digital components of care. Elsevier 2022-04-05 /pmc/articles/PMC9011163/ /pubmed/35433277 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.invent.2022.100536 Text en © 2022 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
spellingShingle Full length Article
Lungu, Anita
Wickham, Robert E.
Chen, Shih-Yin
Jun, Janie J.
Leykin, Yan
Chen, Connie E.-J.
Component analysis of a synchronous and asynchronous blended care CBT intervention for symptoms of depression and anxiety: Pragmatic retrospective study
title Component analysis of a synchronous and asynchronous blended care CBT intervention for symptoms of depression and anxiety: Pragmatic retrospective study
title_full Component analysis of a synchronous and asynchronous blended care CBT intervention for symptoms of depression and anxiety: Pragmatic retrospective study
title_fullStr Component analysis of a synchronous and asynchronous blended care CBT intervention for symptoms of depression and anxiety: Pragmatic retrospective study
title_full_unstemmed Component analysis of a synchronous and asynchronous blended care CBT intervention for symptoms of depression and anxiety: Pragmatic retrospective study
title_short Component analysis of a synchronous and asynchronous blended care CBT intervention for symptoms of depression and anxiety: Pragmatic retrospective study
title_sort component analysis of a synchronous and asynchronous blended care cbt intervention for symptoms of depression and anxiety: pragmatic retrospective study
topic Full length Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9011163/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35433277
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.invent.2022.100536
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