This study will evaluate the effectiveness of school-based cognitive behavioral therapy with or without parental involvement in treating anxious children.
Anxiety disorders are among the most common disorders in children. Although anxiety is a normal part of growing up, the worrying experienced by children with anxiety disorders can persist to the point that day-to-day functioning becomes difficult. Physical symptoms of anxiety disorders include a constant sense of worry or stress, headache, nausea, sweating, shaking, and inability to concentrate. Early identification of anxiety disorders is important to prevent progression of the disorder into a chronic issue. Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT), which focuses on behavioral and thinking modifications, has been shown to be the most effective treatment for anxiety disorders. This study will evaluate the effectiveness of school-based CBT with or without parental involvement in treating anxious children who meet DSM-IV criteria or have features of separation anxiety disorder, generalized anxiety disorder, and social phobia. Participants in this single blind study will be randomly assigned by school to one of three treatment groups: CBT for children only, CBT for children plus parent training, and no-treatment control. Each child and parent participant will first undergo an interview, lasting between 1 and 1.5 hours, about the child's symptoms. Additionally, parents will complete rating scales about their children's symptoms and their own symptoms. The participants receiving CBT will then attend 9 weekly group sessions held in the school buildings after school. In the parental involvement group, parents will attend 9 weekly group parent-training sessions held at the same time as the children's CBT group sessions. During the children's CBT sessions, participants will learn techniques to identify feelings of worry, relax, modify negative thoughts, break down difficult situations into smaller achievable steps, reward themselves for trying hard, and maintain treatment gains. For the parent training group, early sessions will focus on normalizing anxiety during childhood, learning about anxiety, and identifying when their children are feeling anxious. The middle sessions will teach parents the same anxiety management skills being taught to their children and ways to help their children to apply the steps at home. The latter sessions will instruct parents on ways to encourage their children's behaviors in anxiety-provoking situations. After completing the 9-week program, participants will attend 2 follow-up booster sessions at Months 1 and 3 post-treatment. Follow-up assessments will occur at Months 3 and 6 and at Years 1, 2, 3, and 4 post-treatment. The assessments will include repeat interviews and rating scales. At the end of the 6-month follow-up assessment, participants in the no-treatment control group will have the opportunity to participate in the CBT group treatments.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
61
CBT for children consists of 9 weekly group CBT sessions. All sessions occur in the school building during after-school hours.
CBT involving children and parents consists of 9 weekly group CBT sessions for the children and 9 weekly concurrent group parent training sessions.
Divisions of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, University of Minnesota Medical School
Minneapolis, Minnesota, United States
Composite Clinician Severity Rating (CSR) on the Anxiety Disorders Interview Schedule (ADIS) for DSM-IV for primary anxiety diagnosis
Time frame: Measured at Month 6 and Years 1, 2, 3, and 4 post-treatment
Multidimensional Anxiety Scale for Children, Scale for Child Anxiety Related Emotional Disorders, Clinical Global Impressions-Improvement Scale, Family Adaptability and Cohesion Evaluation Scale II, and Behavior Assessment System for Children
Time frame: Measured at Months 3 and 6 and Years 1, 2, 3, and 4 post-treatment
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