Effectiveness of the Attacking Anxiety and Depressionä
program when used in structured group treatment for adult anxiety and
affective disorders
Study Description
Purpose: The purpose of this study was to
evaluate the effectiveness of the Attacking Anxiety and Depressionä
self help program when used with a clinical population of diagnoses
anxiety disorders.
The results are compared with a sample of anxiety disorders receiving
"treatment as usual" in outpatient settings. The results are
also compared to those observed in a sample of individuals using the
materials
in a purely self-help manner.
Study sample: Thirty two adult anxiety and
affective disorders treated at the Group Health Cooperative HMO in
Madison Wisconsin.
Treatment method: Structured group treatment
using Attacking Anxiety and Depression ä
materials.
Comparison group: Sample of 1,734 adult
patients suffering from symptoms of anxiety and depression
(332 diagnosed with anxiety disorders; 1,402 with depressive disorders).
These patients were treated by licensed mental health professionals in
geographically diverse outpatient settings across the continental U.S.
Outcomes assessment instrument: OQ-45
Results
Severity of symptoms: The mean OQ-45 score at
the initiation of treatment was 82. A score of this
elevation indicates significant symptoms and other difficulties in
living, and is well above the cutoff
score (63) that differentiates a clinical from a non-clinical sample.
Magnitude of improvement: The average
improvement for this sample was 15 points on the OQ-45.
This compares very favorably the results from the comparison groups,
which averaged 10 points.
Direct comparison of average change scores can be
misleading. Analysis of large samples has consistently demonstrated that
patients with higher levels of distress tend to show greater benefit
from treatment. Unless both samples are matched for severity, it is
difficult to make a direct comparison. A useful technique for viewing
differences in outcomes that overcomes this problem is to plot the graph
of the relationship of severity at intake to numbers of points
improvement. Each point on the graph represents the average improvement
experienced by patients with a given score at intake.
 |
The graph on the left compares the results of
patients in this study with the sample of anxiety and affective
disorders receiving "treatment as usual". As can be
seen from the graph, the Attacking Anxiety and Depression
treatment group shows substantially greater benefit at all
levels of severity. For the anxiety disorders, the difference
tends to increase with the severity of symptoms. The differences
between the study sample and comparison groups are significant
at the 99% confidence level. |
Discussion
The patients participating in this study showed
considerable benefit from the treatment, particularly when compared to a
sample of anxiety and affective disorders receiving "treatment as
usual" from a large sample of mental health professionals broadly
distributed geographically.
In a soon to be published study1, Finch,
Lambert & Brown report the results of a naturalistic study of the
Attacking Anxiety and Depressionä
program used in a purely self-help manner. In this study, 176
individuals who had purchased the program through normal retail channels
(infomercials, etc.) completed and returned the OQ-45 at two and four,
and/or two and six week intervals. The average improvement by
the end of six weeks was 16 points, comparable to the results from
the current study.
The study reported by Finch et al. was drawn from a
sample of arguably highly motivated individuals who had paid for the
materials, completed the lessons, and mailed in OQ-45s as requested. The
present study addresses the question if similar results can be achieved
with a sample of diagnosed patients treated in a clinical setting.
The results of the current study suggest that patients
using the Attacking Anxiety and Depressionä
program in a structured group setting experience similar benefit to the
motivated sample using the
self help materials. These results indicate that the Attacking Anxiety
and Depressionä
program may be
an extremely useful in the cost-effective treatment of anxiety and
affective disorders in clinical settings.
1 Finch, A.E., Lambert, M.J. & Brown,
J.; Attacking Anxiety: A Naturalistic Study of a Multi-Media Self-Help
Program; Journal of Clinical Psychology; appearing summer of
1999.
Jeb Brown, Ph.D.
jebbrown@clinical-informatics.com
http://www.clinical-informatics.com |