Saving clinicians' time by delegating routine aspects of therapy to a computer: a randomized controlled trial in phobia/panic disorder

被引:142
作者
Marks, IM
Kenwright, M
McDonough, M
Whittaker, M
Mataix-Cols, D
机构
[1] Univ London Imperial Coll Sci Technol & Med, Dept Med Psychol, London SW7 2AZ, England
[2] Kings Coll London, Inst Psychiat, London WC2R 2LS, England
[3] S London & Maudsley Trust, London, England
关键词
D O I
10.1017/S003329170300878X
中图分类号
B849 [应用心理学];
学科分类号
040203 ;
摘要
Background. The demand for time-consuming psychotherapy of phobia/panic exceeds the supply of trained therapists. Delegating routine therapy aspects to a computer might ease this problem. Method. Ninety-three out-patients with phobia or panic disorder were randomized in a 2: 2: 1 ratio to have self-exposure therapy guided either mainly by a stand-alone Computer system (FearFighter) or entirely face-to-face by a clinician, or to have mainly computer-guided self-relaxation as a placebo. Both computer groups (FearFighter and relaxation) had brief back-up advice from a clinician. Primary outcome measures were self- and blind-assessor ratings of Main Problem and Goals, and Global Phobia. Results. Drop-outs occurred significantly more often in the two self-exposure groups (43% if mainly computer-guided, 24% if entirely clinician-guided) than with self-relaxation (6%); the difference between the two self-exposure groups was not significant. Even with all drop-outs included, the mainly computer-guided exposure group and the relaxation group had 73% less clinician time per patient than did the entirely clinician-guided exposure group. The two self-exposure groups had comparable improvement and satisfaction at post-treatment and at 1-month follow-up, while relaxation was ineffective. Mean improvement on the primary Outcome measures (self- and assessor-rated) was 46% computer, 49% clinician, 9% relaxation at post-treatment (week 10) and 58 % computer, 53% clinician and -4% relaxation at 1-month follow-up (week 14). Mean effect sizes on the primary outcome measures were 2(.)9 computer, 3(.)5 clinician and 0(.)5 relaxation at post-treatment, and 3(.)7 computer, 3(.)5 clinician and 0(.)5 relaxation at 1-month follow-up. The assessor did not rate patients at follow-up. Conclusions. Despite its (non-significantly) higher dropout rate, self-exposure therapy for panic/phobia cut clinician time per patient by 73% without losing efficacy when guided mainly by a computer rather than entirely by a clinician. The finding needs confirmation at a follow-up that is longer and includes a blind assessor. Self-relaxation had the highest rate of completers but was ineffective.
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页码:9 / 17
页数:9
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