| Literature DB >> 31878249 |
Sanne P A Rasing1,2, Yvonne A J Stikkelbroek1,2, Denise H M Bodden1,3.
Abstract
Computerized and blended treatments seem to be an attractive treatment for adolescents as an alternative to face-to-face treatment, but mental health professionals seem hesitant to use these treatment modalities. This review provides an overview of factors contributing to and withholding from using computerized or blended treatment in routine care. Three databases were searched with terms related to (1) adolescents, (2) depression, (3) computerized or blended, and (4) treatment. Of the 33 articles identified, 10 focused on unguided computerized treatments, six on guided, two on blended, two compared unguided, blended- and face-to-face treatment to no treatment, and eight studies on games. Further, two articles that were focused on an online monitoring tool and three on intervention characteristics or preferred modes of help-seeking. Evidence for effectiveness, adherence, drop-out, and forming therapeutic relations were suspected to be barriers, but are no reason to reject computerized or blended treatment. Improvement in mental health literacy and the possibility to tailor the intervention are facilitators. However, adolescents' intention to seek help, acceptability of computerized treatment, symptom severity, time spent by therapist, and other facilities are identified as barriers and they need to be taken into account when using computerized or blended interventions. Nevertheless, computerized and blended are promising treatments for depressed youth.Entities:
Keywords: adolescents; blended; computerized; depression; review; treatment; youth
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31878249 PMCID: PMC6982181 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph17010153
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1Flow chart of study selection.
Characteristics of the included studies.
| Study | Country | Intervention | Target Population | Study Participants | Study Type | Design | Outcome Measure |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Abeles et al. (2009) [ | United Kingdom | Unguided computer-based CBT | Youth (12–16 years) with depressive disorders | a | Effect evaluation | Pre-post design without control condition | Intervention effects |
| Berg et al. (2019) [ | Sweden | Guided internet-based CBT vs. monitoring and non-specific counseling | Youth (15–19 years) with depressive disorders | a | Effect evaluation | RCT | Mental health literacy |
| Bobier et al. (2013) [ | New Zealand | Self-help CBT-based computer game | Youth (16–19 years) admitted for severe psychiatric disorder (among which depressive disorders) | a | Feasibility, usability and/or acceptability evaluation; | Pre-post design without control condition | Acceptability; adherence and dropout |
| Bradford & Rickwood (2014) [ | Australia | N/a b | Youth (15–19 years) with mood disorders | a | Evaluation of preferred modes of help seeking | Cross-sectional study | Acceptability; intention to seek help |
| Bradley et al. (2012) [ | Canada | Unguided internet-based CBT | Youth (15–18 years) with depressive symptoms | a | Feasibility, usability and/or acceptability evaluation | Pre-post design without control condition | Acceptability; intention to seek help; tailoring the intervention |
| Cheek et al. (2014) [ | Australia | Self-help CBT-based computer game | Youth (12–19 years) with depressive symptoms c | Youth (13–18) recruited from the general population | Feasibility, usability and/or acceptability evaluation | Pre-post design without control condition | Acceptability |
| Davidson et al. (2014) [ | United States | Unguided internet-based behavioral activation | Youth at risk for post-disaster mental health problems among which mood disorders c | Study 1: | Feasibility, usability and/or acceptability evaluation | Cross-sectional | Acceptability; treatment engagement; time spent; tailoring the intervention |
| De Vos et al. (2017) [ | Netherlands | Blended CBT | Youth (12–18 years) with depressive disorders | a | Feasibility, usability and/or acceptability evaluation | Pre-post design without control condition | Acceptability; adherence and dropout; treatment engagement; time spent |
| Fleming et al. (2012) [ | New Zealand | Self-help CBT-based computer game vs. wait list control | Youth (13–16 years) with depressive symptoms | a | Effect evaluation | Pragmatic RCT | Intervention effects; adherence and dropout; intention to seek help; risk monitoring |
| Forchuk et al. (2016) [ | Canada | Internet-based monitoring tool | Youth (16–21 years) in mental health care with depressive disorders | Mental health care providers from acute and tertiary care facilities | Feasibility, usability and/or acceptability evaluation | Qualitative study | Acceptability; treatment engagement; time spent; therapeutic relation; symptoms severity |
| Johnston et al. (2014) [ | Australia | Therapist-guided internet-based CBT | Young adults (18–24 years) with mild or moderate depressive symptoms | a | Effect evaluation | Pre-post design without control condition | Intervention effects; acceptability; adherence and dropout |
| Kobak et al. (2015) [ | United States | Blended CBT vs. treatment as usual | Youth (12–17 years) with mood disorders | a | Feasibility, usability and/or acceptability evaluation | RCT | Intervention effects; acceptability; adherence and dropout; therapeutic relation; mental health literacy |
| Kurki et al. (2018) [ | Finland | Guided internet-based intervention | Youth (15–17 years) with depressive or anxiety disorders | Registered nurses from outpatient clinics for adolescent psychiatry | Feasibility, usability and/or acceptability evaluation | Qualitative study | Symptoms severity; risk monitoring |
| Kurki et al. (2011) [ | Finland | N/a b | Youth (13–18 years) in mental health care with depressive symptoms | Registered nurses from outpatient clinics for adolescent psychiatry | Evaluation of preferred modes of help seeking | Qualitative study | Therapeutic relation; symptoms severity; facilities for computerized interventions |
| Logsdon et al. (2018) [ | United States | Unguided internet-based intervention vs. no intervention control | Adolescent mothers (12–21 years) with depressive symptoms | a | Effect evaluation | Pre-post design with control condition | Intervention effects; acceptability; intention to seek help |
| Lokkerbol et al. (2018) [ | Netherlands | N/a b | Young adults and adults (from age 18) with depressive disorders | a | Evaluation of preferred modes of help seeking | Cross-sectional study | Acceptability |
| Lucassen Hatcher et al. (2015) [ | New Zealand | Self-help CBT-based computer game | Youth (13–19 years) from sexual minorities with depressive symptoms | a | Feasibility, usability and/or acceptability evaluation | Qualitative study | Acceptability |
| Lucassen et al. (2013) [ | New Zealand | Self-help CBT-based computer game | Youth (16–21 years) from sexual minorities with depressive symptoms | a | Feasibility, usability and/or acceptability evaluation | Qualitative study | Acceptability |
| Lucassen, Merry et al. (2015) [ | New Zealand | Self-help CBT-based computer game | Youth (13–19 years) from sexual minorities with depressive symptoms | a | Feasibility, usability and/or acceptability evaluation | Pre-post design without control condition | Intervention effects; acceptability; adherence and dropout; mental health literacy |
| Lucassen et al. (2018) [ | New Zealand | Self-help CBT-based computer game | Youth (15–21 years) from sexual minorities with depressive symptoms | LGBT+ young people | Feasibility, usability and/or acceptability evaluation | Qualitative study | Acceptability |
| Merry et al. (2012) [ | New Zealand | Self-help CBT-based computer game | Youth (12–19 years) with depressive symptoms | a | Effect evaluation | RCT | Intervention effects; acceptability; adherence and dropout |
| O’Kearney et al. (2006) [ | Australia | Teacher-guided internet-based CBT vs. standard personal developmental activities | Male youth (15–16 years) with depressive symptoms | a | Effect evaluation | Pre-post design with control condition | Intervention effects |
| Rickhi et al. (2015) [ | Canada | Unguided spirituality informed internet-based intervention vs. wait list control | Youth (13–18 years) and young adults (19–24 years) with depressive disorders | a | Effect evaluation | RCT | Intervention effects; adherence and dropout |
| Sethi (2013) [ | Australia | Unguided internet-based CBT vs. face-to-face CBT vs. blended CBT vs. no intervention control | Young adults (18–25 years) with mild or moderate depressive or anxiety symptoms | a | Feasibility, usability and/or acceptability evaluation | RCT | Intervention effects; adherence and dropout |
| Sethi et al. (2010) [ | Australia | Unguided internet-based CBT vs. face-to-face CBT vs. blended CBT vs. no intervention control | Youth and young adults (15–25 years) with mild or moderate depressive or anxiety symptoms | a | Effect evaluation | RCT | Intervention effects |
| Smith et al. (2015) [ | United Kingdom | Unguided computer-based CBT vs. wait list control | Youth (12–16 years) with depressive symptoms | a | Effect evaluation | RCT | Intervention effects |
| Stallard et al. (2011) [ | United Kingdom | Psychology assistant-guided computer-based CBT vs. wait list control | Youth (11–16 years) with depressive or anxiety disorders | a | Feasibility, usability and/or acceptability evaluation | RCT | Intervention effects; acceptability; adherence and dropout; therapeutic relation |
| Stasiak et al. (2014) [ | New Zealand | Unguided computer-based CBT game vs. computer-based psychoeducation | Youth (13–18 years) with depressive symptoms | a | Effect evaluation | RCT | Intervention effects; acceptability; adherence and dropout |
| Sundram et al. (2017) [ | New Zealand | Internet-based monitoring tool | Youth (12–19 years) with mild or moderate depressive symptoms | Youth (12–19 years) | Feasibility, usability and/or acceptability evaluation | Qualitative study | Acceptability; treatment engagement; time spent; therapeutic relation; risk monitoring |
| Topooco et al. (2018) [ | Sweden | Guided internet-based CBT vs. monitoring and non-specific counseling | Youth (15–19 years) with depressive disorders | a | Effect evaluation | RCT | Intervention effects; adherence and dropout; treatment engagement; time spent; therapeutic relation |
| Van der Zanden et al. (2012) [ | Netherlands | Guided internet-based CBT vs. wait list control | Youth (16–25 years) with depressive symptoms | a | Effect evaluation | RCT | Intervention effects; adherence and dropout |
| Vangberg et al. (2012) [ | Norway | Unguided internet-based CBT | Youth (15–20 years) with depressive symptoms | a | Feasibility, usability and/or acceptability evaluation | Cross-sectional study | Acceptability |
| Wright et al. (2017) [ | United Kingdom | Unguided computer-based CBT vs. self-help websites | Youth (12–18 years) with depressive symptoms | a | Effect evaluation | RCT | Intervention effects; adherence and dropout |
a Study participants were a sample from the target population; b Study was not aimed at a specific intervention, therefore, no specific target population is formulated; c Target population of the intervention was not used as study population; CBT: Cognitive Behavioural Therapy; RCT: Randomized Controlled Trial.