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An online program that helps parents apply principles of cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) using digital resources and remote support from a therapist is as effective as traditional talk therapies for overcoming child anxiety problems while substantially reducing cost and therapist time, new research showed.

In a randomized controlled trial, children participating in the program Online Support and Intervention (OSI) for Child Anxiety showed similar reductions in anxiety and improvements in daily functioning as peers receiving standard CBT.

“This study shows that by making the most of digital tools, we can deliver effective treatments more efficiently, helping services to better meet the growing demand for mental health services for children in ways that can also be more accessible for many families,” lead investigator Cathy Creswell, PhD, Departments of Experimental Psychology and Psychiatry, Oxford University, Oxford, England, told this news organization.

“I believe by incorporating this approach into standard care, we could address some of the major challenges faced by services and families,” Dr. Creswell added. “We are now moving the work out of the research environment into routine practice.”

The study was published online in The Lancet Psychiatry
 

Care Gaps for Common Problem

Anxiety is common in children, yet gaps exist between needed and available care, which investigators say could be filled by digitally augmented psychological treatments.

OSI, the digital platform used in the current study, was designed with therapists and families to aid parents in helping their children overcome problems with anxiety with remote therapist support.

The program provides parents with the core CBT content in accessible forms, including information in text, audio, and video and exercises supported by worksheets and quizzes.

There is also an optional child game app to help motivate the child to engage with the intervention. Parents are supported with weekly brief telephone or video call sessions with the therapist.

The two-arm randomized controlled non-inferiority trial included 444 families from 34 participating Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services (CAMHS) sites in England and Northern Ireland. Half received OSI plus therapist support and half CAMHS treatment as usual. The children were between 5 and 12 years old.

A total of 176 (79%) participants in the OSI plus therapist support group and 164 (74%) in the treatment as usual group completed the 26-week assessment.
 

‘Compelling’ Evidence

The primary clinical outcome was parent-reported interference caused by child anxiety at 26 weeks, using the Child Anxiety Impact Scale-Parent report.

On this measure, OSI plus therapist support was non-inferior to usual treatment, with a standardized mean difference of only 0.01 (95% CI, −0.15 to 0.17; P < .0001).

The intervention was also significantly non-inferior to usual treatment across all secondary outcomes, including total anxiety and depression scores, overall functioning, peer relationship problems, and prosocial behavior.

In addition, OSI plus therapist support was associated with nearly 60% less therapist time (182 min on average vs 307 min) and with lower costs than standard treatment. The OSI program was “likely to be cost-effective under several scenarios,” the researchers reported. Qualitative interviews showed “good” acceptability of the online program.

“This trial presents compelling clinical evidence and promising cost-effectiveness evidence that digitally augmented psychological therapies with therapist support can increase efficiencies in and access to child mental health services without compromising patient outcomes,” Dr. Creswell and colleagues concluded.

“Efforts are now needed to take full advantage of the opportunity that digitally augmented psychological treatments can bring to drive a step change in children’s mental health services, learning from successful examples of digital implementation elsewhere in health services,” they added.
 

 

 

‘Call to Action’

“We desperately need more trials” like this one, which showed the “clear value of a digitally augmented intervention over the usual face-to-face treatment” for child anxiety, wrote the authors of an accompanying editorial.

“Moreover, with the intervention delivered across 34 CAMHS settings in England and Northern Ireland, this study gives us confidence that the new intervention is effective in a range of clinical contexts at least in high-income countries and offers invaluable information about barriers and facilitators to future implementation,” wrote Sam Cartwright-Hatton, PhD, with the University of Sussex, Brighton and Hove, and Abby Dunn, PhD, with the University of Surrey, Guilford, England. “The potential benefits to overburdened services are clear.”

“That regular CAMHS clinicians, with minimal training and support from researchers, delivered the intervention within their standard caseload shows that it can be embedded within routine practice without a requirement for highly prepared and supervised clinicians,” they added.

However, more information is needed on the content and quality of the traditional CBT provided in the control group. It’s also important to determine if the program would be as effective with even less clinical support and in all types of childhood anxiety.

In addition, most clinicians in the OSI group only treated one patient with the new program and didn’t take advantage of the additional support offered by the research team, “which means we have not seen the true effectiveness of this intervention in the hands of well-practiced and well-trained staff,” Drs. Cartwright-Hatton and Dunn wrote.

Analyses included recruitment at the lower target amount, and one fifth of children were not offered treatment within the 12-week window recommended in the trial, they added.

“Although these issues place limits on the conclusions that can be drawn, they should also be seen as a call to action,” they wrote, adding that real-world clinical trials with greater clinician participation are needed. “All credit to this exceptional team for making this trial happen and for making it work as well as it did.”

The study was funded by the Department for Health and Social Care, UK Research and Innovation Research Grant, National Institute for Health and Care (NIHR) Research Policy Research Programme, Oxford and Thames Valley NIHR Applied Research Collaboration, and Oxford Health NIHR Biomedical Research Centre. Dr. Creswell is co-developer of the OSI platform and the author of a book for parents that is used in many of the participating clinical teams to augment treatment as usual for child anxiety problems and receives royalties from sales. Dr. Cartwright-Hatton and Dr. Dunn had no disclosures.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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An online program that helps parents apply principles of cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) using digital resources and remote support from a therapist is as effective as traditional talk therapies for overcoming child anxiety problems while substantially reducing cost and therapist time, new research showed.

In a randomized controlled trial, children participating in the program Online Support and Intervention (OSI) for Child Anxiety showed similar reductions in anxiety and improvements in daily functioning as peers receiving standard CBT.

“This study shows that by making the most of digital tools, we can deliver effective treatments more efficiently, helping services to better meet the growing demand for mental health services for children in ways that can also be more accessible for many families,” lead investigator Cathy Creswell, PhD, Departments of Experimental Psychology and Psychiatry, Oxford University, Oxford, England, told this news organization.

“I believe by incorporating this approach into standard care, we could address some of the major challenges faced by services and families,” Dr. Creswell added. “We are now moving the work out of the research environment into routine practice.”

The study was published online in The Lancet Psychiatry
 

Care Gaps for Common Problem

Anxiety is common in children, yet gaps exist between needed and available care, which investigators say could be filled by digitally augmented psychological treatments.

OSI, the digital platform used in the current study, was designed with therapists and families to aid parents in helping their children overcome problems with anxiety with remote therapist support.

The program provides parents with the core CBT content in accessible forms, including information in text, audio, and video and exercises supported by worksheets and quizzes.

There is also an optional child game app to help motivate the child to engage with the intervention. Parents are supported with weekly brief telephone or video call sessions with the therapist.

The two-arm randomized controlled non-inferiority trial included 444 families from 34 participating Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services (CAMHS) sites in England and Northern Ireland. Half received OSI plus therapist support and half CAMHS treatment as usual. The children were between 5 and 12 years old.

A total of 176 (79%) participants in the OSI plus therapist support group and 164 (74%) in the treatment as usual group completed the 26-week assessment.
 

‘Compelling’ Evidence

The primary clinical outcome was parent-reported interference caused by child anxiety at 26 weeks, using the Child Anxiety Impact Scale-Parent report.

On this measure, OSI plus therapist support was non-inferior to usual treatment, with a standardized mean difference of only 0.01 (95% CI, −0.15 to 0.17; P < .0001).

The intervention was also significantly non-inferior to usual treatment across all secondary outcomes, including total anxiety and depression scores, overall functioning, peer relationship problems, and prosocial behavior.

In addition, OSI plus therapist support was associated with nearly 60% less therapist time (182 min on average vs 307 min) and with lower costs than standard treatment. The OSI program was “likely to be cost-effective under several scenarios,” the researchers reported. Qualitative interviews showed “good” acceptability of the online program.

“This trial presents compelling clinical evidence and promising cost-effectiveness evidence that digitally augmented psychological therapies with therapist support can increase efficiencies in and access to child mental health services without compromising patient outcomes,” Dr. Creswell and colleagues concluded.

“Efforts are now needed to take full advantage of the opportunity that digitally augmented psychological treatments can bring to drive a step change in children’s mental health services, learning from successful examples of digital implementation elsewhere in health services,” they added.
 

 

 

‘Call to Action’

“We desperately need more trials” like this one, which showed the “clear value of a digitally augmented intervention over the usual face-to-face treatment” for child anxiety, wrote the authors of an accompanying editorial.

“Moreover, with the intervention delivered across 34 CAMHS settings in England and Northern Ireland, this study gives us confidence that the new intervention is effective in a range of clinical contexts at least in high-income countries and offers invaluable information about barriers and facilitators to future implementation,” wrote Sam Cartwright-Hatton, PhD, with the University of Sussex, Brighton and Hove, and Abby Dunn, PhD, with the University of Surrey, Guilford, England. “The potential benefits to overburdened services are clear.”

“That regular CAMHS clinicians, with minimal training and support from researchers, delivered the intervention within their standard caseload shows that it can be embedded within routine practice without a requirement for highly prepared and supervised clinicians,” they added.

However, more information is needed on the content and quality of the traditional CBT provided in the control group. It’s also important to determine if the program would be as effective with even less clinical support and in all types of childhood anxiety.

In addition, most clinicians in the OSI group only treated one patient with the new program and didn’t take advantage of the additional support offered by the research team, “which means we have not seen the true effectiveness of this intervention in the hands of well-practiced and well-trained staff,” Drs. Cartwright-Hatton and Dunn wrote.

Analyses included recruitment at the lower target amount, and one fifth of children were not offered treatment within the 12-week window recommended in the trial, they added.

“Although these issues place limits on the conclusions that can be drawn, they should also be seen as a call to action,” they wrote, adding that real-world clinical trials with greater clinician participation are needed. “All credit to this exceptional team for making this trial happen and for making it work as well as it did.”

The study was funded by the Department for Health and Social Care, UK Research and Innovation Research Grant, National Institute for Health and Care (NIHR) Research Policy Research Programme, Oxford and Thames Valley NIHR Applied Research Collaboration, and Oxford Health NIHR Biomedical Research Centre. Dr. Creswell is co-developer of the OSI platform and the author of a book for parents that is used in many of the participating clinical teams to augment treatment as usual for child anxiety problems and receives royalties from sales. Dr. Cartwright-Hatton and Dr. Dunn had no disclosures.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

An online program that helps parents apply principles of cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) using digital resources and remote support from a therapist is as effective as traditional talk therapies for overcoming child anxiety problems while substantially reducing cost and therapist time, new research showed.

In a randomized controlled trial, children participating in the program Online Support and Intervention (OSI) for Child Anxiety showed similar reductions in anxiety and improvements in daily functioning as peers receiving standard CBT.

“This study shows that by making the most of digital tools, we can deliver effective treatments more efficiently, helping services to better meet the growing demand for mental health services for children in ways that can also be more accessible for many families,” lead investigator Cathy Creswell, PhD, Departments of Experimental Psychology and Psychiatry, Oxford University, Oxford, England, told this news organization.

“I believe by incorporating this approach into standard care, we could address some of the major challenges faced by services and families,” Dr. Creswell added. “We are now moving the work out of the research environment into routine practice.”

The study was published online in The Lancet Psychiatry
 

Care Gaps for Common Problem

Anxiety is common in children, yet gaps exist between needed and available care, which investigators say could be filled by digitally augmented psychological treatments.

OSI, the digital platform used in the current study, was designed with therapists and families to aid parents in helping their children overcome problems with anxiety with remote therapist support.

The program provides parents with the core CBT content in accessible forms, including information in text, audio, and video and exercises supported by worksheets and quizzes.

There is also an optional child game app to help motivate the child to engage with the intervention. Parents are supported with weekly brief telephone or video call sessions with the therapist.

The two-arm randomized controlled non-inferiority trial included 444 families from 34 participating Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services (CAMHS) sites in England and Northern Ireland. Half received OSI plus therapist support and half CAMHS treatment as usual. The children were between 5 and 12 years old.

A total of 176 (79%) participants in the OSI plus therapist support group and 164 (74%) in the treatment as usual group completed the 26-week assessment.
 

‘Compelling’ Evidence

The primary clinical outcome was parent-reported interference caused by child anxiety at 26 weeks, using the Child Anxiety Impact Scale-Parent report.

On this measure, OSI plus therapist support was non-inferior to usual treatment, with a standardized mean difference of only 0.01 (95% CI, −0.15 to 0.17; P < .0001).

The intervention was also significantly non-inferior to usual treatment across all secondary outcomes, including total anxiety and depression scores, overall functioning, peer relationship problems, and prosocial behavior.

In addition, OSI plus therapist support was associated with nearly 60% less therapist time (182 min on average vs 307 min) and with lower costs than standard treatment. The OSI program was “likely to be cost-effective under several scenarios,” the researchers reported. Qualitative interviews showed “good” acceptability of the online program.

“This trial presents compelling clinical evidence and promising cost-effectiveness evidence that digitally augmented psychological therapies with therapist support can increase efficiencies in and access to child mental health services without compromising patient outcomes,” Dr. Creswell and colleagues concluded.

“Efforts are now needed to take full advantage of the opportunity that digitally augmented psychological treatments can bring to drive a step change in children’s mental health services, learning from successful examples of digital implementation elsewhere in health services,” they added.
 

 

 

‘Call to Action’

“We desperately need more trials” like this one, which showed the “clear value of a digitally augmented intervention over the usual face-to-face treatment” for child anxiety, wrote the authors of an accompanying editorial.

“Moreover, with the intervention delivered across 34 CAMHS settings in England and Northern Ireland, this study gives us confidence that the new intervention is effective in a range of clinical contexts at least in high-income countries and offers invaluable information about barriers and facilitators to future implementation,” wrote Sam Cartwright-Hatton, PhD, with the University of Sussex, Brighton and Hove, and Abby Dunn, PhD, with the University of Surrey, Guilford, England. “The potential benefits to overburdened services are clear.”

“That regular CAMHS clinicians, with minimal training and support from researchers, delivered the intervention within their standard caseload shows that it can be embedded within routine practice without a requirement for highly prepared and supervised clinicians,” they added.

However, more information is needed on the content and quality of the traditional CBT provided in the control group. It’s also important to determine if the program would be as effective with even less clinical support and in all types of childhood anxiety.

In addition, most clinicians in the OSI group only treated one patient with the new program and didn’t take advantage of the additional support offered by the research team, “which means we have not seen the true effectiveness of this intervention in the hands of well-practiced and well-trained staff,” Drs. Cartwright-Hatton and Dunn wrote.

Analyses included recruitment at the lower target amount, and one fifth of children were not offered treatment within the 12-week window recommended in the trial, they added.

“Although these issues place limits on the conclusions that can be drawn, they should also be seen as a call to action,” they wrote, adding that real-world clinical trials with greater clinician participation are needed. “All credit to this exceptional team for making this trial happen and for making it work as well as it did.”

The study was funded by the Department for Health and Social Care, UK Research and Innovation Research Grant, National Institute for Health and Care (NIHR) Research Policy Research Programme, Oxford and Thames Valley NIHR Applied Research Collaboration, and Oxford Health NIHR Biomedical Research Centre. Dr. Creswell is co-developer of the OSI platform and the author of a book for parents that is used in many of the participating clinical teams to augment treatment as usual for child anxiety problems and receives royalties from sales. Dr. Cartwright-Hatton and Dr. Dunn had no disclosures.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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