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Psychological interventions for social anxiety disorder in children and adolescents: A systematic review and network meta-analysis

Forfatter(e)
Xian, J., Zhang, Y., Jiang, B.
År
2024
DOI
10.1016/j.jad.2024.08.097
Tidsskrift
Journal of Affective Disorders
Volum
20
Sider
20
Kategori(er)
Angst og engstelighet (inkl. både vansker og lidelse)
Tiltakstype(r)
FamilieterapiKognitiv atferdsterapi, atferdsterapi og kognitiv terapi Psykodynamisk/interpersonlig terapi E-helsetiltak (spill, internett, telefon)
Abstract

BACKGROUND

Social anxiety disorder (SAD) is a high-prevalence mental disorder among children and adolescents. The aim of this study is to compare and rank the effectiveness of several psychotherapies for SAD among children and adolescents.

METHODS

Only randomized controlled trials (RCTs) were utilized by searching PubMed, Embase, Cochrane Library, and Web of Science. We used network meta-analysis in the Bayesian framework to analyze the data. This study is registered with PROSPERO, number CRD42023476829.

RESULTS

In total, 30 RCTs with 1547 individuals were included, and nine psychotherapies with three control conditions were compared and ranked in this study. The findings revealed that internet-delivered cognitive behavioural therapy (surface under the cumulative ranking curve [SUCRA: 71.2%]), group cognitive behavioural therapy (SUCRA: 68.4%), and individual cognitive behavioural therapy (SUCRA: 66.0%) significantly reduced social anxiety symptoms; internet-delivered cognitive behavioural therapy also significantly decreased depression symptoms in these patients (SUCRA: 92.2%). In addition, group cognitive behavioural therapy can enhance functioning in these patients (SUCRA: 89.6%).

CONCLUSION

These results suggest that internet-delivered cognitive behavioural therapy is the optimal type of psychotherapy for reducing social anxiety and depression symptoms in children and adolescents with SAD, internet-delivered parent-child interaction therapy and cognitive bias modification of interpretation have relatively poor treatment effects on social anxiety symptoms in children than other psychological interventions, and group cognitive behavioural therapy has better benefits in enhancing the functioning among children and adolescents with SAD. Further studies are needed to ascertain these results due to the limited number of included studies.