Per Carlbring
  • Email
  • Facebook
  • Linkedin
  • Twitter
  • YouTube
  • RSS
  • News
  • Publications
  • MSc thesis
  • Questionnaires
  • CV
  • Contact
Search the site...
  • Swedish
  • English
  • Home
  • Nyheter @en
  • Internet-based guided self-help for parents of children on cancer treatment

Internet-based guided self-help for parents of children on cancer treatment

Posted on 2015-12-01 by Per Carlbring in Nyheter @en
0

We recently published a randomized controlled trial in the journal Psycho-Oncology. The aim of the study was to investigate the feasibility and preliminary efficacy of an Internet-based guided self-help intervention for posttraumatic stress symptoms (PTSS) and related symptoms in parents of children on cancer treatment.

Methods

Parents of children on cancer treatment, who fulfilled the modified symptom criteria on the PTSD Checklist, were randomly allocated to the intervention or to a wait-list control condition. The intervention group accessed a 10-week guided self-help program via the Internet based on principles from cognitve behavior therapy. The primary outcome PTSS and the secondary outcomes depression and anxiety were assessed by self-report preintervention and postintervention.

Results

Seven hundred forty-seven parents were approached and informed about the study, 92 were assessed for eligibility, and 58 were included and randomized to the intervention (n = 31) or wait list (n = 27). Eightteen participants completed the intervention. Intention-to-treat analyses indicated a significant effect of the intervention on PTSS with a large between-group effect size at postassessment (Cohen’s d = 0.88). The intervention group reported reductions in PTSS with a large within-group effect size (d = 1.62) compared with a minimal reduction in the wait-list group (d = 0.09). There was a significant intervention effect on depression and anxiety and reductions in the intervention group with large within-group effect sizes (d = 0.85–1.09).

Conclusions

Findings indicate a low enrollment rate and considerable attrition but also that Internet-based guided self-help shows promise for parents of children on cancer treatment who report a high level of PTSS and would like to take part in an Internet-based intervention.

Read the full paper:

Cernvall, M., Carlbring, P., Ljungman, L., Ljungman, G., & von Essen, L. (2015).Internet-based guided self-help for parents of children on cancer treatment: a randomized controlled trial. Psychooncology, 24(9), 1152-1158. doi:10.1002/pon.3788

Cancer, parent

Subscribe to my Newsletter!

Keep you up-to-date with what is happening. One mail per month.

News

  • The Future of Mental Health Treatment: Prescription Digital Therapeutics, Cyberpsychology, and Care Intelligence Solutions

    2022-04-11
  • Open PhD position in Psychology (with salary!)

    2022-03-09
  • Integrating virtual realities and psychotherapy

    2021-08-03
  • Internet-based cognitive behavior therapy for depression, social anxiety disorder, and panic disorder: Effectiveness and predictors of response in a teaching clinic

    2021-07-14
  • New impact factor for “my” journal

    2021-07-01
  • Dismantling, optimising, and personalising internet cognitive behavioural therapy for depression: a systematic review and component network meta-analysis

    2021-05-04
  • New meta-analysis on genes and psychotherapy outcome in anxiety disorders

    2021-02-25
  • The Prevalence and Clinical and Sociodemographic Factors of Problem Online Gambling: A Systematic Review

    2021-02-02
  • Online Consultations in Mental Healthcare During the Covid-19 Outbreak: An International Survey Study on Uptake and Experiences

    2020-12-17
  • NEW STUDY: How to succeed in keeping your New Year’s resolution

    2020-12-09
  • Virtual Reality exposure therapy for public speaking anxiety in routine care: a single-subject effectiveness trial

    2020-11-30
  • Sudden gains and large intersession improvements in internet-based psychodynamic treatment (IPDT) for depressed adolescents

    2020-11-30
  • Seeking neutral: A Virtual Reality-based person-identity-matching task for attentional bias modification

    2020-11-30
  • Measuring Alliance Toward Embodied Virtual Therapists in the Era of Automated Treatments

    2020-07-09
  • Measuring Alliance Toward Embodied Virtual Therapists in the Era of Automated Treatments

    2020-07-09
  • Internet Interventions for Adults with Anxiety and Mood Disorders: A Narrative Umbrella Review of Recent Meta-Analyses

    2020-05-19
  • In the Absence of Effects: An Individual Patient Data Meta-Analysis of Non-response and Its Predictors in Internet-Based Cognitive Behavior Therapy

    2020-05-18
  • Are physical activity and sedentary behavior related to depression?

    2020-05-13
  • Comparing internet-delivered cognitive therapy and behavior therapy with telephone support for insomnia disorder: a randomized controlled trial

    2020-04-27
  • Deposit Limit Prompt in Online Gambling for Reducing Gambling Intensity: A Randomized Controlled Trial

    2020-04-27

Popular subjects:

Anxiety Attention bias training Cancer CBT Cognitive behavior therapy cognitive flexibility Conference content analysis Depression Effectiveness Exposure therapy fMRI Gambling group therapy ICBT Internet-based treatment Internetbehandling Internet Interventions internet treatment Just published meta-analysis Negative effects Ny artikel Online gambling open access Panic disorder Ph.D. Dissertation PhD Physical activity Problem gambling Procrastination Psychometric PTSD qualitative Randomized controlled trial responsible gambling Review Smartphone @en Social anxiety social anxiety disorder social phobia Stepped care Thesis Treatment Virtual reality
Copyleft (ɔ) 2020 Professor Per Carlbring