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Online therapy for depressed teens works equally well regardless of approach

A year-long study of 272 adolescents found no meaningful difference between two popular digital mental health treatments—or their costs. The finding suggests health systems and insurers can expand access to whichever online therapy fits their infrastructure, rather than betting on one approach to reduce teen depression.

Originaltitel: Twelve-month outcomes and comparative costs of internet-delivered psychodynamic therapy versus cognitive-behavioral therapy for adolescent depression: a randomized controlled trial

Abstrakt

<p>Introduction Adolescent depression poses a major public health concern with substantial clinical and societal implications. Both internet-delivered cognitive behavioural therapy (ICBT) and internet-delivered psychodynamic therapy (IPDT) have shown efficacy, but questions remain regarding long-term efficacy and cost-effectiveness. The present study presents a 12-month follow-up and cost-comparison from a randomized controlled trial (RCT) comparing ICBT and IPDT for adolescent depression.Methods Participants were 272 adolescents aged 15-19 with a primary diagnosis of major depressive disorder. The primary outcome was depressive symptoms measured with the QIDS-A17-SR while the secondary outcome was anxiety symptoms measured with the GAD-7. Costs were assessed both by comparing costs of treatment and healthcare use 12-month post-treatment using the TIC-P.Results Results were stable at the 12-month follow up compared to treatment endpoint, for both depressive and anxiety symptoms. There were no significant group differences at the 12-month follow-up. There were no differences in treatment costs or in costs for healthcare use one-year post-treatment.Discussion This study suggests that treatment gains from IPDT and ICBT for adolescent depression remain stable during a 12-month follow-up period, with no differences between the treatments one-year post-treatment. Furthermore, it suggests comparable costs for the treatments. Interpretation of health-care use data was restricted due to the COVID-19 pandemic taking place during the follow-up period. This adds to the literature suggesting that ICBT and IPDT can be seen as viable alternatives for treating adolescent depression. More research into the long-term effects and cost-effectiveness is needed.</p>

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