Childhood anxiety disorders (CAD) are common and impairing. Family based cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) is efficacious in treating CAD. Yet, many children do not receive care due to barriers such as limited provider availably, high treatment costs, and constrained family resources (e.g., time). To combat these barriers, other treatment methods have been developed. The stepped care treatment models maximize resources by providing low-intensity, low-cost interventions as a first time treatment, while stepping up care for those needing more intensive treatment. Specifically, a stepped care model for CAD that begins with a parent-focus intervention has great promise to deliver efficacious and cost-effective treatment without having to engage the child. While stepped care approaches show promise in treating CAD with comparable efficacy to standard CBT, there remains a large research-to-practice gap. The stepped care model for CAD that begins with a parent-focused intervention has yet been explored, and very little is known about intervention mediators that explain mechanisms of change. This research is being done to improve the reach and quality of services using a stepped care model, offering an affordable and practical solution to the widespread gap in youth mental health care.
Anxiety disorders in children and adolescents (CAD) are common and confer significant impairment in academic, peer, and family functioning. If left inadequately treated, CAD remains chronic and increases the risk of physical and mental health problems, unemployment, substance use disorders, and suicidality in adulthood. Family-based cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) has demonstrated efficacy in the treatment of CAD. Yet, many children do not receive care due to barriers such as limited provider availability, high treatment cost, and familial constraints (e.g., time). Effective, personalized treatment approaches that are accessible, efficient, and cost-effective are needed. To combat these barriers, other treatment methods have been developed. A stepped care model for CAD that begins with a parent-focus intervention has great promise to deliver efficacious and cost-effective treatment without having to engage the child. Stepped care is an alternative low-intensity parent focused delivery system that incorporates the best available evidence to treat CAD within a stepped care model, which utilizes task-shifting with parent involvement, honoring the role of parents in helping their children. \*The hypothesized treatment mechanisms include parent-focused targets (i.e., family accommodation, parental distress) and child-focused targets (i.e., emotional processing, inhibitory learning) and child-focused targets (i.e., emotional processing, inhibitory learning). The stepped care model would task-shift therapeutic components to parents using scalable multi-media-based content. Although stepped care approaches show promise in treating CAD with comparable efficacy to standard CBT, there remains a large research-to-practice gap and very little is known about intervention mediators that explain mechanisms of change. This research is being done to understand and improve the reach and quality of services using a stepped care model, offering an affordable and practical solution to the widespread gap in youth mental health care.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
106
RMT is a multi-component relation-based protocol for children and adolescents experiencing anxiety. Initially designed as a control condition in multiple RCTs for CAD, the protocol integrates evidence-based relaxation strategies with non-anxiety specific elements, such as autobiographical writing
STEP-A is a two-step treatment with Step 1 an abbreviated version of SPACE, which has demonstrated comparable efficacy to standard SPACE for CAD and OCD. In Step 1, parents read Breaking Free of Child Anxiety and OCD and engage in therapeutic tasks with their child while meeting with the therapist for four, 45-minute sessions at weeks 2, 4, 6, and 8. STEP-A Step 1 responders proceed to a 10-week maintenance period to practice skills learned. Step 2 consists of PCET, an empirically validated family-based CBT protocol designed to treat CAD more effectively and efficiently than traditional CBT by emphasizing exposures and increasing parental involvement to maximize generalization. Ten weekly sessions with the therapist. Sessions 1 and 2 include psychoeducation and development of exposure hierarchy, while sessions 3, onward, emphasize in-session exposure practice and identifying between-session exposure homework, with parents leading in-session exposures starting session 5, onward.
Baylor College of Medicine
Houston, Texas, United States
Pediatric Anxiety Rating Scale
The Pediatric Anxiety Rating Scale is a clinician-administered measures of pediatric anxiety symptom and symptom severity, that can be used across a broad range of anxiety-related disorders. The first part of the measure consists of a symptom checklist where responses are recorded from both the child and caregiver/parent to index the various types of anxiety the child experiences. The second part is a 7-item symptom severity scale where responses are recorded using a 0 ("no symptoms") to 5 ("extreme") Likert-type scale. Different scoring methods can be used, including a 5-item scoring (range = 0 - 25), that is preferred for clinical trial research, and is calculated using the sum of items 2, 3, 5, 6, and 7; this approach excludes items assessing overall number of anxiety symptoms and somatic symptoms. Higher scores are suggestive of more severe anxiety.
Time frame: Baseline (before treatment or week 1), midway point (week 8), stepped care treatment (7 weeks), PCET during treatment (10 weeks), post (week 20), 1 month follow-up (week 24), caregiver interview (week 32)
The Clinical Global Impression-Severity
The Clinical Global Impression-Severity is a single-item rating of symptom severity that can be used across a broad range of mental health conditions. The measure asks the rater to assess the overall severity of the individual's illness with response options ranging from 1 ("normal; no illness") to 7 ("among the most extremely ill patients").
Time frame: Baseline (before treatment or week 1), midway point (week 8), stepped care treatment (7 weeks), PCET during treatment (10 weeks), post (week 20), 1 month follow-up (week 24), caregiver interview (week 32)
The Clinical Global Impression-Improvement
The Clinical Global Impressions-Improvement Scale is a single-item assessment measure used to assess overall improvement in symptoms relative to baseline. Responses are recorded using a 1 ("very much worse) to 7 ("very much improved") scale, with the midpoint, 4, reflecting "no change" since baseline.
Time frame: Baseline (before treatment or week 1), midway point (week 8), stepped care treatment (7 weeks), PCET during treatment (10 weeks), post (week 20), 1 month follow-up (week 24), caregiver interview (week 32)
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