An open trial of brief transdiagnostic internet treatment for anxiety and depression

The present study evaluated the efficacy of a brief version of an internet-administered transdiagnosticCBT protocol, the Wellbeing Program (Titov et al., 2011), designed to treat three anxiety disorders andmajor depression within the same program. This brief version included the same core CBT skills...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Dear, B., Titov, N., Schwencke, G., Andrews, G., Johnston, L., Craske, M., McEvoy, Peter
Format: Journal Article
Published: Elsevier 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/9523
_version_ 1848745974267117568
author Dear, B.
Titov, N.
Schwencke, G.
Andrews, G.
Johnston, L.
Craske, M.
McEvoy, Peter
author_facet Dear, B.
Titov, N.
Schwencke, G.
Andrews, G.
Johnston, L.
Craske, M.
McEvoy, Peter
author_sort Dear, B.
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description The present study evaluated the efficacy of a brief version of an internet-administered transdiagnosticCBT protocol, the Wellbeing Program (Titov et al., 2011), designed to treat three anxiety disorders andmajor depression within the same program. This brief version included the same core CBT skills as theoriginal, but condensed the materials from 8 to 5 online lessons, reduced the duration of treatment from10 to 8 weeks and did not include an online forum. Thirty-two individuals with a principal diagnosis ofmajor depression, generalised anxiety disorder, panic disorder or social phobia received CBT-basedonline educational lessons, homework assignments, weekly contact from a clinical psychologist andautomated emails. Eighty-one percent of participants completed the lessons within the 8 week program.Post-treatment and 3-month follow-up data were collected from 28/32 and 31/32 participants respectively. Participants improved significantly on the Depression Anxiety and Stress Scales e 21 Item, Patient Health Questionnaire e 9 Item, and Generalised Anxiety Disorder e 7 Item scales, with corresponding within-group effect sizes (Cohen’s d) at follow-up of 1.05, .73, and .95, respectively. Participants rated the procedure as highly acceptable with gains of a similar magnitude as those found for the original program, but less time was spent per participant by the clinician in the present trial (mean ¼ 44.61 min, SD ¼ 34.45) compared to the original program (mean ¼ 84.76 min, SD¼ 50.37). These results provide additional support for the efficacy of transdiagnostic iCBT in the treatment of anxiety and depressive disorders and indicate that a brief version may be of benefit.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T06:25:53Z
format Journal Article
id curtin-20.500.11937-9523
institution Curtin University Malaysia
institution_category Local University
last_indexed 2025-11-14T06:25:53Z
publishDate 2011
publisher Elsevier
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling curtin-20.500.11937-95232017-02-28T01:32:57Z An open trial of brief transdiagnostic internet treatment for anxiety and depression Dear, B. Titov, N. Schwencke, G. Andrews, G. Johnston, L. Craske, M. McEvoy, Peter Open trial Depression Anxiety (iCBT) Treatment Transdiagnostic Internet cognitive behavioural therapy The present study evaluated the efficacy of a brief version of an internet-administered transdiagnosticCBT protocol, the Wellbeing Program (Titov et al., 2011), designed to treat three anxiety disorders andmajor depression within the same program. This brief version included the same core CBT skills as theoriginal, but condensed the materials from 8 to 5 online lessons, reduced the duration of treatment from10 to 8 weeks and did not include an online forum. Thirty-two individuals with a principal diagnosis ofmajor depression, generalised anxiety disorder, panic disorder or social phobia received CBT-basedonline educational lessons, homework assignments, weekly contact from a clinical psychologist andautomated emails. Eighty-one percent of participants completed the lessons within the 8 week program.Post-treatment and 3-month follow-up data were collected from 28/32 and 31/32 participants respectively. Participants improved significantly on the Depression Anxiety and Stress Scales e 21 Item, Patient Health Questionnaire e 9 Item, and Generalised Anxiety Disorder e 7 Item scales, with corresponding within-group effect sizes (Cohen’s d) at follow-up of 1.05, .73, and .95, respectively. Participants rated the procedure as highly acceptable with gains of a similar magnitude as those found for the original program, but less time was spent per participant by the clinician in the present trial (mean ¼ 44.61 min, SD ¼ 34.45) compared to the original program (mean ¼ 84.76 min, SD¼ 50.37). These results provide additional support for the efficacy of transdiagnostic iCBT in the treatment of anxiety and depressive disorders and indicate that a brief version may be of benefit. 2011 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/9523 Elsevier restricted
spellingShingle Open trial
Depression
Anxiety
(iCBT)
Treatment
Transdiagnostic
Internet cognitive behavioural therapy
Dear, B.
Titov, N.
Schwencke, G.
Andrews, G.
Johnston, L.
Craske, M.
McEvoy, Peter
An open trial of brief transdiagnostic internet treatment for anxiety and depression
title An open trial of brief transdiagnostic internet treatment for anxiety and depression
title_full An open trial of brief transdiagnostic internet treatment for anxiety and depression
title_fullStr An open trial of brief transdiagnostic internet treatment for anxiety and depression
title_full_unstemmed An open trial of brief transdiagnostic internet treatment for anxiety and depression
title_short An open trial of brief transdiagnostic internet treatment for anxiety and depression
title_sort open trial of brief transdiagnostic internet treatment for anxiety and depression
topic Open trial
Depression
Anxiety
(iCBT)
Treatment
Transdiagnostic
Internet cognitive behavioural therapy
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/9523