Elsevier

Journal of Anxiety Disorders

Volume 36, December 2015, Pages 63-77
Journal of Anxiety Disorders

Transdiagnostic versus disorder-specific and clinician-guided versus self-guided internet-delivered treatment for generalized anxiety disorder and comorbid disorders: A randomized controlled trial

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.janxdis.2015.09.003Get rights and content
Under a Creative Commons license
open access

Highlights

  • Study compared disorder-specific and transdiagnostic treatment approaches.

  • Study also compared clinician-guided and self-guided treatment approaches.

  • Study is 1 of 4 related randomized controlled trials examining these issues.

  • Study focused on generalized anxiety disorder and comorbid disorders.

  • No marked differences were observed between the treatment approaches.

Abstract

Generalized anxiety disorder (GAD) can be treated effectively with either disorder-specific cognitive behavior therapy (DS-CBT) or transdiagnostic CBT (TD-CBT). The relative benefits of DS-CBT and TD-CBT for GAD and the relative benefits of delivering treatment in clinician guided (CG-CBT) and self-guided (SG-CBT) formats have not been examined. Participants with GAD (n = 338) were randomly allocated to receive an internet-delivered TD-CBT or DS-CBT intervention delivered in either CG-CBT or SG-CBT formats. Large reductions in symptoms of GAD (Cohen’s d  1.48; avg. reduction  50%) and comorbid major depressive disorder (Cohen’s d  1.64; avg. reduction  45%), social anxiety disorder (Cohen’s d  0.80; avg. reduction  29%) and panic disorder (Cohen’s d  0.55; avg. reduction  33%) were found across the conditions. No substantive differences were observed between DS-CBT and TD-CBT or CG-CBT and SG-CBT, highlighting the public health potential of carefully developed TD-CBT and SG-CBT.

Keywords

Generalized anxiety disorder
Anxiety disorders
Treatment
Transdiagnostic
Disorder-specific
Self-guided
Clinician-guided
Internet
24-Month follow-up
Randomized controlled trial

Cited by (0)