Systematic Review of Cognitive-Behavioural Therapy for Social Anxiety Disorder in Psychosis
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Methods
2.1. Study Design
2.2. Search Strategy
2.3. Selection Criteria
2.3.1. Types of Studies
2.3.2. Types of Intervention
2.3.3. Comparator
2.4. Types of Participants
2.5. Primary Outcome
2.6. Secondary Outcomes
2.7. Selection Procedure, Data Extraction and Data Management
3. Data Synthesis
4. Results
4.1. Description of Studies
4.2. Participants
4.3. Interventions
4.4. Comparisons
4.5. Outcomes
4.6. Methodological Quality
4.7. Summary of Findings
5. Discussion
6. Implications for Practice and Research
7. Limitations
8. Conclusions
Acknowledgments
Author Contributions
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Study | Country | Design | Participants | Intervention | Control | Outcome Measures |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Halperin et al. (2000) [27] | Australia | Randomised controlled trial (no details of randomisation provided) | 16 (13 males) | Group CBT based on Heimberg et al. (1995) [28] model; eight 2-h weekly sessions | Waitlist-control group | Social anxiety: BSPS; SIAS Depression: CDSS Quality of life: QLESQ Psychological symptom: BSI Alcohol use: AUDIT |
Kingsep et al. (2003) [28] | Australia | Controlled trial with alternation as allocation method | 33 (no data on gender) | Group CBT based on Heimberg et al. (1995) [28] model; twelve 2-h weekly sessions plus one follow-up session | Waitlist-control group | Social anxiety: BSPS; SIAS; BFNE Depression: CDSS Quality of life: QLESQ Psychological symptom: BSI |
Halperin et al. (2000) [27] | Kingsep et al. (2003)[28] | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
Judgement | Support for Judgement | Judgement | Support for Judgement | |
Random sequence generation (selection bias) | Low risk | Quote: “participants were randomly allocated” | High risk | Allocation by alternation |
Allocation concealment (selection bias) | High risk | Quote: “if a participant assigned to the treatment group could not participate due to another commitment; he was thus assigned to the control group” | High risk | Not done—allocation was by alternation |
Blinding of participants and personnel (performance bias) | Low risk | Participants and therapists could not be blind | Low risk | Participants and therapists could not be blind |
Blinding of outcome assessment (detection bias) (patient-reported outcomes) | Unclear risk | Low risk | Assessors were independent from the therapists and blind to the patients’ treatment conditions | |
Incomplete outcome data addressed (attrition bias) | High risk | Control group: 2 participants excluded from analysis (1 moved away; 1 was hospitalised). Intervention group: 2 participants withdrew during week 2 | High risk | 41 initially consented and a total of 8 dropped out of the study—all were in the intervention group and dropped out at session 2 or 3 |
Selective reporting (reporting bias) | Low risk | All outcome measures reported | Low risk | All outcome measures reported |
Other bias | High risk | Waitlist control received the intervention | High risk | Waitlist control received the intervention. More than one outcome assessor—no data on inter-rater reliability |
Study | Pre-Treatment (Mean; SD) | Post-Treatment (Mean; SD) | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Intervention | Control | Intervention | Control | p Value | |
Halperin et al. (2000) [27] | |||||
Social anxiety | |||||
BSPS | 47.29 (10.63) | 37.56 (13.58) | 38.14 (6.23) | 37 (13.18) | * |
SIAS | 45.14 (11.26) | 41.11 (12.61) | 37.43 (11.89) | 40.88 (11.39) | * |
Depression | |||||
CDSS | 10.71 (2.43) | 8.56 (3.50) | 4.57 (3.26) | 9.33 (2.70) | ** |
Psychological distress | |||||
BSI–GSI | 71.86 (5.73) | 64 (6.12) | 64.86 (10.59) | 64.11 (5.75) | ** |
Quality of life | |||||
QLESQ | 52.22 (11.85) | 54.79 (12.35) | 58.75 (10.65) | 54.50 (11.32) | ** |
Alcohol use | |||||
AUDIT | 11.29 (9.14) | 6.67 (8.83) | 8.43 (5.68) | 7.11 (9.24) | ns |
Kingsep et al. (2003)[28] | |||||
Social anxiety | |||||
BSPS | 47.13 (11.79) | 39.71 (12.16) | 36.81 (7.12) | 38.82 (11.66) | ** |
SIAS | 48.56 (10.01) | 44.53 (15.03) | 34.44 (11.25) | 44.24 (14.25) | ** |
BFNE | 49.78 (10.12) | 46.88 (8.43) | 37.78 (11.98) | 48 (9.75) | ** |
Depression | |||||
CDSS | 9.25 (3.36) | 8.94 (3.83) | 4.06 (2.89) | 9.29 (2.87) | ** |
Psychological distress | |||||
BSI–GSI | 53.38 (24.30) | 57.25 (17.19) | 46.38 (20.97) | 57.74 (15.01) | * |
Quality of life | |||||
QLESQ | 49.43 (12.80) | 54.65 (11.83) | 59.03 (8.64) | 54.23 (11.44) | ** |
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Michail, M.; Birchwood, M.; Tait, L. Systematic Review of Cognitive-Behavioural Therapy for Social Anxiety Disorder in Psychosis. Brain Sci. 2017, 7, 45. https://doi.org/10.3390/brainsci7050045
Michail M, Birchwood M, Tait L. Systematic Review of Cognitive-Behavioural Therapy for Social Anxiety Disorder in Psychosis. Brain Sciences. 2017; 7(5):45. https://doi.org/10.3390/brainsci7050045
Chicago/Turabian StyleMichail, Maria, Max Birchwood, and Lynda Tait. 2017. "Systematic Review of Cognitive-Behavioural Therapy for Social Anxiety Disorder in Psychosis" Brain Sciences 7, no. 5: 45. https://doi.org/10.3390/brainsci7050045
APA StyleMichail, M., Birchwood, M., & Tait, L. (2017). Systematic Review of Cognitive-Behavioural Therapy for Social Anxiety Disorder in Psychosis. Brain Sciences, 7(5), 45. https://doi.org/10.3390/brainsci7050045