| Literature DB >> 27716200 |
Edward Watkins1, Alexandra Newbold2, Michelle Tester-Jones2, Mahmood Javaid2, Jennifer Cadman2, Linda M Collins3, John Graham3, Mohammod Mostazir2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Depression is a global health challenge. Although there are effective psychological and pharmaceutical interventions, our best treatments achieve remission rates less than 1/3 and limited sustained recovery. Underpinning this efficacy gap is limited understanding of how complex psychological interventions for depression work. Recent reviews have argued that the active ingredients of therapy need to be identified so that therapy can be made briefer, more potent, and to improve scalability. This in turn requires the use of rigorous study designs that test the presence or absence of individual therapeutic elements, rather than standard comparative randomised controlled trials. One such approach is the Multiphase Optimization Strategy, which uses efficient experimentation such as factorial designs to identify active factors in complex interventions. This approach has been successfully applied to behavioural health but not yet to mental health interventions. METHODS/Entities:
Keywords: Cognitive behavioural therapy; Depression; Factorial; MOST; Online
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27716200 PMCID: PMC5054552 DOI: 10.1186/s12888-016-1054-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Psychiatry ISSN: 1471-244X Impact factor: 3.630
Experimental groups of the fractional factorial design
| Condition | Functional Analysis | Concrete training | Compassion | Absorption | Relaxation | Activity Scheduling | Thought Challenging |
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Note: Every factor occurs an equal number of times at high and low levels (i.e. balanced) and all factors are orthogonal to each other. Each effect estimate involves all 32 of the conditions in Table 1, thereby maintaining the power associated with all participants. This Resolution IV design means that all main effects are aliased with 3-way and higher interactions, and all 2-way interactions are aliased with 2-way and higher interactions, on assumption that non-negligible 3-way interactions are unlikely. In contrast, a standard RCT is aliased for all main effects and interactions of treatment components
Fig. 1Consort Flow Diagram for IMPROVE-2 study showing recruitment flow