Selected article for: "control trial and depression anxiety"

Author: Wuthrich, Viviana M; Meuldijk, Denise; Jagiello, Tess; Robles, Alberto González; Jones, Michael P; Cuijpers, Pim
Title: Efficacy and effectiveness of psychological interventions on co-occurring mood and anxiety disorders in older adults: A systematic review and meta-analysis.
  • Cord-id: k0fj0lh1
  • Document date: 2020_12_23
  • ID: k0fj0lh1
    Snippet: OBJECTIVES Co-occurring mood and anxiety disorders are common in older adult populations and are associated with worse long-term outcomes and poorer treatment response than either disorder alone. This systematic review and meta-analysis aimed to examine the efficacy and effectiveness of psychological interventions for treating co-occurring mood and anxiety disorders in older adults. METHOD The study was registered (PROSPERO CRD4201603834), databases systematically searched (MEDLINE, PSYCINFO, Pu
    Document: OBJECTIVES Co-occurring mood and anxiety disorders are common in older adult populations and are associated with worse long-term outcomes and poorer treatment response than either disorder alone. This systematic review and meta-analysis aimed to examine the efficacy and effectiveness of psychological interventions for treating co-occurring mood and anxiety disorders in older adults. METHOD The study was registered (PROSPERO CRD4201603834), databases systematically searched (MEDLINE, PSYCINFO, PubMed, Cochrane Reviews) and articles screened according to PRISMA guidelines. INCLUSION Participants aged ≥60 years with clinically significant anxiety and depression, psychological intervention evaluated against control in randomised controlled trial, changes in both anxiety and depression reported at post-treatment. RESULTS Four studies were included (total n = 255, mean age range 67-71 years). Overall, psychological interventions (CBT, mindfulness) resulted in significant benefits over control conditions (active, waitlist) for treating depression in the presence of co-occurring anxiety (Hedges' g = -0.44), and treating anxiety in the presence of depression (Hedges' g = -0.55). However, conclusions are limited; the meta-analysis was non-significant, few studies were included, several were low quality and there was high heterogeneity between studies. Benefits at follow-up were not established. CONCLUSION Co-occurring anxiety and mood disorders can probably be treated simultaneously with psychological interventions in older adults with moderate effect sizes, however, more research is needed. Given comorbidity is common and associated with worse clinical outcomes, more high-quality clinical trials are needed that target the treatment of co-occurring anxiety and mood disorders, and report changes in diagnostic remission for both anxiety and mood disorders independently. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.

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