BACKGROUND
Background: The prevalence of major depression is very high and it is considered one of the most hindering disorders, associated with a strong social- and financial impact. Despite the effectiveness of traditional cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT), response, improvement, remission and recovery rates are low and relapse percentages are considerably high. This study is the first to investigate the effectiveness of online videoconferencing CBT with smartphone app support in patients with major depression. With this ‘modern’ way of online CBT, we aim to enhance the effectiveness of CBT
OBJECTIVE
Objective:
The objective is to assess the results of online videoconferencing CBT with app-support compared to TAU in patients with depression. To enhance therapy outcome and patient satisfaction for the treatment of depression.
METHODS
Methods: A retrospective cohort study was conducted in an outpatient treatment center (PsyQ-Parnassia, the Netherlands). Routine Outcome Monitoring (ROM) data was collected from September 2018 to March 2020, at pre- and post-treatment. Seven hundred and seventy patients were included; 40 for psyQ-online and 730 for psyQ-TAU. The primary outcome measure is the symptoms of depression measured with the Quick Inventory of Depressive Symptomatology (QIDS-SR-16; Trivedi et al., 2004). To assess ‘significant change’ in depressive symptoms we compared pre-and post-treatment scores for PsyQ-online group compared with the PsyQ-TAU group. Clinical significant change or remission was defined as ‘going from above the clinical cut-off score at pre-treatment to below the cut-off score’ which equals ‘normalcy’ or ‘no depression’ (in this case below 6) at post-treatment. ‘Reliable change’ was defined as ‘whether people changed sufficiently that the change is unlikely to be due to simple measurement unreliability’. Reliable changes were grouped in four categories: (1) Recovered = reliable and clinical significant change in QIDS-SR-16, (2) Improved = reliable change, without clinical significant change, (3) No change = no reliable change and no clinical significant change, and (4) Deteriorated = negative reliable change in the QIDS-SR-16 (Jakobsen et al., 2017). To investigate patients satisfaction for online psychotherapy when compared to the patients in the PsyQ-TAU group, we used KLANT scores (Huijbrechts et al., 2009).
RESULTS
Results: The psyQ-online patients showed significantly higher improvement, remission and recovery percentages compared to the psyQ-TAU patients. Online patients were more satisfied with their therapy compared to TAU patients.
CONCLUSIONS
Conclusion: ‘Significant reduction’ in depressive symptoms and high percentages of ‘improvement’, ‘remission’ and ‘recovery’, can be obtained when performing online cbt with smartphone-application-support for depression. This even enhances CBT-outcome in highly satisfied patients.
CLINICALTRIAL
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