Brief behavioral therapy for anxiety and depression in pediatric primary care: Breadth of intervention impact

KTG Schwartz, M Kado-Walton, JF Dickerson… - Journal of the American …, 2023 - Elsevier
KTG Schwartz, M Kado-Walton, JF Dickerson, M Rozenman, DA Brent, G Porta, FL Lynch…
Journal of the American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry, 2023Elsevier
Objective To report on broad-based outcomes of the Brief Behavioral Therapy (BBT) trial for
pediatric anxiety and depression. Secondary data analyses expand on previous reports by
assessing diagnostic remission and independent functioning, impact on targeted
psychopathology, and spillover effects on non-targeted outcomes. Method Youth (N= 185; 8-
16.9 years; 58% female; 78% White; 21% Hispanic) with anxiety and/or depression were
eligible for this multi-site trial. Enrolled youth were randomly assigned to receive 8 to 12 …
Objective
To report on broad-based outcomes of the Brief Behavioral Therapy (BBT) trial for pediatric anxiety and depression. Secondary data analyses expand on previous reports by assessing diagnostic remission and independent functioning, impact on targeted psychopathology, and spillover effects on non-targeted outcomes.
Method
Youth (N = 185; 8-16.9 years; 58% female; 78% White; 21% Hispanic) with anxiety and/or depression were eligible for this multi-site trial. Enrolled youth were randomly assigned to receive 8 to 12 sessions of BBT in primary care or assisted referral to outpatient care (ARC). Assessments were conducted 16 and 32 weeks post randomization.
Results
BBT was superior to ARC on remission of all targeted diagnoses (week 16: 56.8% vs 28.2%, p < .001; week 32: 62.5% vs 38.9%, p = .004), clinician-rated independent functioning (week 16: 75.0% vs 45.7%, p < .001; week 32: 81.2% vs 55.7%, p < .001), and on measures of anxiety, depression, suicide items, total comorbid behavioral and emotional problems, and hyperactivity (d = 0.21-0.49). Moderation analyses revealed superior outcomes for Hispanic youth in BBT vs ARC for diagnostic remission, anxiety, emotional problems, and parent−child conflict. Youth depression at baseline moderated effects on peer problems and parent−child conflict, with effects favoring BBT. Significant main and moderated effects of BBT on change in non-targeted outcomes were largely mediated by change in anxiety (24.2%-49.3% of total effects mediated).
Conclusion
BBT has positive effects on youth, mediated by the strong impact of the intervention on anxiety. Analyses continue to support positive outcomes for Hispanic youth, suggesting that BBT is a broadly effective transdiagnostic treatment option for diverse populations.
Clinical trial registration information
Brief Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) for Pediatric Anxiety and Depression in Primary Care; https://clinicaltrials.gov; NCT01147614.
Elsevier
以上显示的是最相近的搜索结果。 查看全部搜索结果