以学校为基础的干预措施预防儿童和青少年的焦虑、抑郁和行为障碍:系统回顾和网络荟萃分析

D. Caldwell, S. Davies, J. Thorn, J. Palmer, Paola Caro, S. Hetrick, D. Gunnell, Sumayya Anwer, J. López-López, C. French, J. Kidger, S. Dawson, R. Churchill, James Thomas, R. Campbell, N. Welton
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Welton","doi":"10.3310/phr09080","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"\n \n Schools in the UK increasingly have to respond to anxiety, depression and conduct disorder as key causes of morbidity in children and young people.\n \n \n \n The objective was to assess the comparative effectiveness of educational setting-based interventions for the prevention of anxiety, depression and conduct disorder in children and young people.\n \n \n \n This study comprised a systematic review, a network meta-analysis and an economic evaluation.\n \n \n \n The databases MEDLINE, EMBASE™ (Elsevier, Amsterdam, the Netherlands), PsycInfo® (American Psychological Association, Washington, DC, USA) and Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL) were searched to 4 April 2018, and the NHS Economic Evaluation Database (NHS EED) was searched on 22 May 2019 for economic evaluations. 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引用次数: 8

摘要

英国的学校越来越多地对焦虑、抑郁和行为障碍做出反应,这些都是儿童和年轻人发病的主要原因。目的是评估基于教育环境的干预措施在预防儿童和青少年的焦虑、抑郁和行为障碍方面的相对有效性。本研究包括系统综述、网络元分析和经济评价。检索数据库MEDLINE、EMBASE™(爱思唯尔,荷兰阿姆斯特丹)、PsycInfo®(美国心理学会,华盛顿特区,美国)和Cochrane中央对照试验注册库(Central)至2018年4月4日,并于2019年5月22日检索NHS经济评估数据库(NHS EED)进行经济评估。没有应用语言或日期过滤器。主要结果是干预后自我报告的焦虑、抑郁或行为障碍症状。纳入了4-18岁儿童和青少年预防焦虑、抑郁或行为障碍的普遍或有针对性干预措施的随机/准随机试验。筛选由两名评审人员独立进行。数据提取由一名审稿人进行,另一名审稿人进行检查。干预级和组件级网络元分析在OpenBUGS中进行。对经济学文献进行了回顾,并进行了成本-后果分析。本综述共纳入142项研究,其中109项用于网络荟萃分析。在109项研究中,57项被评为随机序列生成和分配隐藏的偏倚风险不明确。异质性为中等。在普遍的中学环境中,正念/放松干预[标准化平均差(SMD) -0.65, 95%可信区间(CrI) -1.14至-0.19]和认知行为干预(SMD -0.15, 95%可信区间(CrI) -0.34至0.04)可能对焦虑有效。包含心理教育成分的认知行为干预在干预后立即预防焦虑方面可能有效(SMD -0.30, 95% CrI -0.59至-0.01)。有证据表明,在目标中学环境中,运动可以有效预防焦虑(SMD -0.47, 95% CrI -0.86至-0.09)。有微弱的证据表明,认知行为干预可以在普遍(SMD -0.07, 95% CrI -0.23至0.05)和针对性(SMD -0.38, 95% CrI -0.84至0.07)小学环境中预防焦虑。有微弱的证据表明,认知行为疗法(SMD -0.04, 95% CrI -0.16至0.07)和认知行为+人际治疗(SMD -0.18, 95% CrI -0.46至0.08)可能在普遍的中学环境中有效预防抑郁症。第三波(SMD -0.35, 95% CrI -0.70至0.00)和认知行为干预(SMD -0.11, 95% CrI -0.28至0.05)结合心理教育成分可能在干预后立即有效预防抑郁症。干预后,没有证据表明在目标中学、目标小学或普遍小学环境中干预有效。由于网络元分析的不一致性,大学设置的结果不可靠。报告了五项行为障碍预防研究的叙述性总结,这些研究都是在小学环境中进行的。没有人报告干预后主要时间点的主要结局。经济证据综述报告了来自六项研究的异质性发现。从单一学校预算的角度来看,基于普遍中学环境中的认知行为疗法干预成本,成本-后果分析估计每位学生的干预成本为43英镑。强调针对特定障碍的预防排除了更广泛的心理健康干预措施,并限制了符合条件的行为障碍预防研究的数量。将研究限制在教育环境中提供的干预措施可能限制了合格的大学水平干预措施的数量。以学校为基础的、针对特定障碍的预防干预措施的有效性证据不足,尽管效果不大,证据也不充分。基于认知行为疗法的干预如果包括心理教育成分,可能会更有效。未来预防焦虑和抑郁的试验应该评估有或没有心理教育成分的认知行为干预,包括正念/放松或运动比较,并进行充分的随访。所涉成本必须得到充分衡量。本研究注册号为PROSPERO CRD42016048184。该项目由国家卫生研究所(NIHR)公共卫生研究方案资助,将全文发表在《公共卫生研究》上;第9卷,第8号请参阅NIHR期刊图书馆网站了解更多项目信息。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
School-based interventions to prevent anxiety, depression and conduct disorder in children and young people: a systematic review and network meta-analysis
Schools in the UK increasingly have to respond to anxiety, depression and conduct disorder as key causes of morbidity in children and young people. The objective was to assess the comparative effectiveness of educational setting-based interventions for the prevention of anxiety, depression and conduct disorder in children and young people. This study comprised a systematic review, a network meta-analysis and an economic evaluation. The databases MEDLINE, EMBASE™ (Elsevier, Amsterdam, the Netherlands), PsycInfo® (American Psychological Association, Washington, DC, USA) and Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL) were searched to 4 April 2018, and the NHS Economic Evaluation Database (NHS EED) was searched on 22 May 2019 for economic evaluations. No language or date filters were applied. The main outcomes were post-intervention self-reported anxiety, depression or conduct disorder symptoms. Randomised/quasi-randomised trials of universal or targeted interventions for the prevention of anxiety, depression or conduct disorder in children and young people aged 4–18 years were included. Screening was conducted independently by two reviewers. Data extraction was conducted by one reviewer and checked by a second. Intervention- and component-level network meta-analyses were conducted in OpenBUGS. A review of the economic literature and a cost–consequence analysis were conducted. A total of 142 studies were included in the review, and 109 contributed to the network meta-analysis. Of the 109 studies, 57 were rated as having an unclear risk of bias for random sequence generation and allocation concealment. Heterogeneity was moderate. In universal secondary school settings, mindfulness/relaxation interventions [standardised mean difference (SMD) –0.65, 95% credible interval (CrI) –1.14 to –0.19] and cognitive–behavioural interventions (SMD –0.15, 95% CrI –0.34 to 0.04) may be effective for anxiety. Cognitive–behavioural interventions incorporating a psychoeducation component may be effective (SMD –0.30, 95% CrI –0.59 to –0.01) at preventing anxiety immediately post intervention. There was evidence that exercise was effective in preventing anxiety in targeted secondary school settings (SMD –0.47, 95% CrI –0.86 to –0.09). There was weak evidence that cognitive–behavioural interventions may prevent anxiety in universal (SMD –0.07, 95% CrI –0.23 to 0.05) and targeted (SMD –0.38, 95% CrI –0.84 to 0.07) primary school settings. There was weak evidence that cognitive–behavioural (SMD –0.04, 95% CrI –0.16 to 0.07) and cognitive–behavioural + interpersonal therapy (SMD –0.18, 95% CrI –0.46 to 0.08) may be effective in preventing depression in universal secondary school settings. Third-wave (SMD –0.35, 95% CrI –0.70 to 0.00) and cognitive–behavioural interventions (SMD –0.11, 95% CrI –0.28 to 0.05) incorporating a psychoeducation component may be effective at preventing depression immediately post intervention. There was no evidence of intervention effectiveness in targeted secondary, targeted primary or universal primary school settings post intervention. The results for university settings were unreliable because of inconsistency in the network meta-analysis. A narrative summary was reported for five conduct disorder prevention studies, all in primary school settings. None reported the primary outcome at the primary post-intervention time point. The economic evidence review reported heterogeneous findings from six studies. Taking the perspective of a single school budget and based on cognitive–behavioural therapy intervention costs in universal secondary school settings, the cost–consequence analysis estimated an intervention cost of £43 per student. The emphasis on disorder-specific prevention excluded broader mental health interventions and restricted the number of eligible conduct disorder prevention studies. Restricting the study to interventions delivered in the educational setting may have limited the number of eligible university-level interventions. There was weak evidence of the effectiveness of school-based, disorder-specific prevention interventions, although effects were modest and the evidence not robust. Cognitive–behavioural therapy-based interventions may be more effective if they include a psychoeducation component. Future trials for prevention of anxiety and depression should evaluate cognitive–behavioural interventions with and without a psychoeducation component, and include mindfulness/relaxation or exercise comparators, with sufficient follow-up. Cost implications must be adequately measured. This study is registered as PROSPERO CRD42016048184. This project was funded by the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Public Health Research programme and will be published in full in Public Health Research; Vol. 9, No. 8. See the NIHR Journals Library website for further project information.
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