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Computer-aided psychotherapy for anxiety disorders: a meta-analytic review
journal contribution
posted on 2023-06-07, 18:22 authored by Pim Cuijpers, Isaac M. Marks, Annemieke van Straten, Kate CavanaghKate Cavanagh, Lina Gega, Gerhard AnderssonComputer-aided psychotherapy (CP) is said to (1) be as effective as face-to-face psychotherapy, while requiring less therapist time, for anxiety disorder sufferers, (2) speed access to care, and (3) save traveling time. CP may be delivered on stand-alone or Internet-linked computers, palmtop computers, phone-interactive voice response, DVDs, and cell phones. The authors performed a meta-analysis of 23 randomised controlled studies (RCTs) that compared CP with non-CP in anxiety disorders: phobias, n = 10; panic disorder/agoraphobia, n = 9; PTSD, n = 3; obsessive-compulsive disorder, n = 1. Overall mean effect size of CP compared with non-CP was 1.08 (95% confidence interval: 0.84-1.32). CP and face-to-face psychotherapy did not differ significantly from each other (13 comparisons, d = -0.06). Much caution is needed when interpreting the findings indicating that outcome was unrelated to type of disorder, type of comparison group, mode of CP delivery (Internet, stand-alone PC, palmtop), and recency of the CP system and that effect size decreased when more therapist time was replaced by the computer. Because CP as a whole was as effective as face-to-face psychotherapy, certain forms of CP deserve to be integrated into routine practice.
History
Publication status
- Published
Journal
Cognitive Behaviour TherapyISSN
1650-6073External DOI
Issue
2Volume
38Page range
66-82Pages
17.0Department affiliated with
- Psychology Publications
Full text available
- No
Peer reviewed?
- Yes