A randomised controlled trial of clinician supported vs self-help delivery of online cognitive behaviour therapy for Bulimia Nervosa

•Access to evidence-based treatments for bulimia nervosa (BN) remains inadequate.•Online self-help interventions increase access to evidence-based treatments in a scalable and cost-effective manner.•Both clinician-supported and self-help delivery of online CBT were more effective than WLC in reducin...

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Veröffentlicht in:Psychiatry research 2023-11, Vol.329, p.115534-115534, Article 115534
Hauptverfasser: Barakat, Sarah, Burton, Amy L., Cunich, Michelle, Hay, Phillipa, Hazelton, Jessica L., Kim, Marcellinus, Lymer, Sharyn, Madden, Sloane, Maloney, Danielle, Miskovic-Wheatley, Jane, Rogers, Daniel, Russell, Janice, Sidari, Morgan, Touyz, Stephen, Maguire, Sarah
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Access to evidence-based treatments for bulimia nervosa (BN) remains inadequate.•Online self-help interventions increase access to evidence-based treatments in a scalable and cost-effective manner.•Both clinician-supported and self-help delivery of online CBT were more effective than WLC in reducing BN symptoms.•Clinician-supported was superior to self-help in regards to two secondary variables (laxative use and dietary restraint). High dropout rates and poor adherence associated with digital interventions have prompted research into modifications of these treatments to improve engagement and completion rates. This trial aimed to investigate the added benefit of clinician support when paired alongside a ten-session, online cognitive behaviour therapy (CBT) self-help intervention for bulimia nervosa (BN). As part of a three-arm, phase II randomised controlled trial, 114 participants (16 years or over) with full or subthreshold BN were randomly assigned to complete the intervention in a self-help mode (with administrative researcher contact; n = 38), with adjunct clinician support (weekly 30-minute videoconferencing sessions; n = 37), or a no-treatment waitlist control (WLC; n = 39). Baseline to post-treatment (12-weeks) decreases in objective binge episode frequency were significantly greater for clinician-supported participants as compared to WLC, but not for self-help when compared to WLC. However, due to continued improvements for self-help across follow-up (24-weeks), both arms outperformed WLC when analysed as an overall rate of change across three timepoints. Clinician-supported participants outperformed self-help in regards to laxative use and dietary restraint. Our results demonstrate that good clinical outcomes can be achieved with a relatively brief online CBT-based program even in the absence of structured clinical support, indicating a possible overreliance upon clinician support as a primary adherence-facilitating mechanism.
ISSN:0165-1781
1872-7123
DOI:10.1016/j.psychres.2023.115534