reviewPLoS ONEOct 13, 2010GOLD OA

Computer Therapy for the Anxiety and Depressive Disorders Is Effective, Acceptable and Practical Health Care: A Meta-Analysis

UNSW Sydney · Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam · +2 more institutions

PubMed
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Abstract

Background

Depression and anxiety disorders are common and treatable with cognitive behavior therapy (CBT), but access to this therapy is limited.

Objective

Review evidence that computerized CBT for the anxiety and depressive disorders is acceptable to patients and effective in the short and longer term. METHOD: Systematic reviews and data bases were searched for randomized controlled trials of computerized cognitive behavior therapy versus a treatment or control condition in people who met diagnostic criteria for major depression, panic disorder, social phobia or generalized anxiety disorder. Number randomized, superiority of treatment versus control (Hedges g) on primary outcome measure, risk of bias, length of follow up, patient adherence and satisfaction were extracted. PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: 22 studies of comparisons with a control group were identified. The mean effect size superiority was 0.88 (NNT 2.13), and the benefit was evident across all four disorders. Improvement from computerized CBT was maintained for a median of 26 weeks follow-up. Acceptability, as indicated by adherence and satisfaction, was good. Research probity was good and bias risk low. Effect sizes were non-significantly higher in comparisons with waitlist than with active treatment control conditions. Five studies comparing computerized CBT with traditional face-to-face CBT were identified, and both modes of treatment appeared equally beneficial.

Citation impact

1,371
total citations
FWCI
44.80
Percentile
100%
References
50
Citations per year

Authors

5

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Anxiety
  • Panic disorder
  • Randomized controlled trial
  • Cognitive behavioral therapy
  • Medicine
  • Meta-analysis
  • Depression (economics)
  • Anxiety disorder
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