Is guided self-help as effective as face-to-face psychotherapy for depression and anxiety disorders? A systematic review and meta-analysis of comparative outcome studies
Amsterdam Public Health · Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam · +4 more institutions
Abstract
Although guided self-help for depression and anxiety disorders has been examined in many studies, it is not clear whether it is equally effective as face-to-face treatments.MethodWe conducted a meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials in which the effects of guided self-help on depression and anxiety were compared directly with face-to-face psychotherapies for depression and anxiety disorders. A systematic search in bibliographical databases (PubMed, PsycINFO, EMBASE, Cochrane) resulted in 21 studies with 810 participants.
The overall effect size indicating the difference between guided self-help and face-to-face psychotherapy at post-test was d=-0.02, in favour of guided self-help. At follow-up (up to 1 year) no significant difference was found either. No significant difference was found between the drop-out rates in the two treatments formats.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 32.90
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 57
Authors
5- PCPim CuijpersCorresponding
Amsterdam Public Health, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
- TDTara Donker
Amsterdam Public Health
- AVAnnemieke van Straten
Amsterdam Public Health
- JLJiangyan Li
Institute of Psychology, Chinese Academy of Sciences
- GAGerhard Andersson
Linköping University, Swedish Institute, Karolinska Institutet
Topics & keywords
- Meta-analysis
- PsycINFO
- Anxiety
- Randomized controlled trial
- Psychology
- Depression (economics)
- Face-to-face
- Clinical psychology