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Moderated online social therapy for depression relapse prevention in young people: pilot study of a 'next generation' online intervention: Early Intervention in Psychiatry

  • Simon Rice*
  • , John Gleeson
  • , Christopher Davey
  • , Sarah Hetrick
  • , Alexandra Parker
  • , Reeva Lederman
  • , Greg Wadley
  • , Greg Murray
  • , Helen Herrman
  • , Richard Chambers
  • , Penni Russon
  • , Christopher Miles
  • , Simon D'Alfonso
  • , Melissa Thurley
  • , Gina Chinnery
  • , Tamsyn Gilbertson
  • , Dina Eleftheriadis
  • , Emma Barlow
  • , Daniella Cagliarini
  • , Jia-Wern Toh
  • Stuart McAlpine, Peter Koval, Sarah Bendall, Jens Einar Jansen, Matthew Hamilton, Patrick McGorry, Mario Alvarez-Jimenez
*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleResearchpeer-review

Abstract

AIM: Implementation of targeted e-mental health interventions offers a promising solution to reducing the burden of disease associated with youth depression. A single-group pilot study was conducted to evaluate the acceptability, feasibility, usability and safety of a novel, moderated online social therapy intervention (entitled Rebound) for depression relapse prevention in young people. METHODS: Participants were 42 young people (15-25 years) (50% men; mean age = 18.5 years) in partial or full remission. Participants had access to the Rebound platform for at least 12 weeks, including the social networking, peer and clinical moderator and therapy components. RESULTS: Follow-up data were available for 39 (92.9%) participants. There was high system usage, with 3034 user logins (mean = 72.2 per user) and 2146 posts (mean = 51.1). Almost 70% of users had ≥10 logins over the 12 weeks, with 78.5% logging in over at least 2 months of the pilot. A total of 32 (84%) participants rated the intervention as helpful. There was significant improvement between the number of participants in full remission at baseline (n = 5; none of whom relapsed) relative to n = 19 at 12-week follow-up (P < 0.001). Six (14.3%) participants relapsed to full threshold symptoms at 12 weeks. There was a significant improvement to interviewer-rated depression scores (Montgomery-Asberg Depression Rating Scale (MADRS); P = 0.014, d = 0.45) and a trend for improved strength use (P = 0.088, d = 0.29). The single-group design and 12-week treatment phase preclude a full understanding of the clinical benefits of the Rebound intervention. CONCLUSIONS: The Rebound intervention was shown to be acceptable, feasible, highly usable and safe in young people with major depression.
Original languageEnglish
JournalEarly Intervention in Psychiatry
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2016

Keywords

  • Secondary Prevention
  • Internet
  • adolescent
  • recurrence
  • depression

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