|
Greist, John H., Isaac M. Marks, Lee Baer, Kenneth
A. Kobak, Keith W. Wenzel, M. Joyce Hirsch, Julia M. Mantle, Cathryn
M. Clary: Behavior Therapy for Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder Guided
by a Computer or by a Clinician Compared With Relaxation as a Control.
Journal of Clinical Psychiatry 63(2):
138-145, 2002.
Background The
demand for effective behavior therapy for obsessive-compulsive disorder
(OCD) by exposure and ritual prevention exceeds its supply by trained
therapists. A computer-guided behavior therapy self-help system
(BT STEPS) was created that patients access by telephone from home
via interactive voice response technology. This study compared the
value of computer-guided behavior therapy value with that of clinician-guided
behavior therapy and systematic relaxation as a control treatment.
Method After
screening by a clinician, 218 patients with DSM-IV OCD at 8 North
American sites were randomly assigned to 10 weeks of behavior therapy
treatment guided by (1) a computer accessed by telephone and a user
workbook (N = 74) or (2) a behavior therapist (N = 69) or (3) systematic
relaxation guided by an audiotape and manual (N = 75).
Results By week
10, in an intent-to-treat analysis, mean change in score on the
Yale-Brown Obsessive Compulsive Scale was significantly greater
in clinician-guided behavior therapy (8.0) than in computer-guided
(5.6), and changes in scores with both clinician-guided and computer-guided
behavior therapy were significantly greater than with relaxation
(1.7), which was ineffective. Similarly, the percentage of responders
on the Clinical Global Impressions scale was significantly (p
< .05) greater with clinician-guided (60%) than computer-guided
behavior therapy (38%), and both were significantly greater than
with relaxation (14%). Clinician-guided was superior to computer-guided
therapy overall, but not when patients completed at least 1 self-exposure
session (N = 36 [65%]). At endpoint, patients were more satisfied
with either behavior therapy group than with relaxation. Patients
assigned to computer-guided behavior therapy improved more the longer
they spent telephoning the computer (mostly outside usual office
hours) and doing self-exposure. They improved slightly further by
week 26 follow-up, unlike the other 2 groups.
Conclusion For
OCD, computer-guided behavior therapy was effective, although clinician-guided
behavior therapy was even more effective. Systematic relaxation
was ineffective. Computer-guided behavior therapy can be a helpful
first step in treating patients with OCD when clinician-guided behavior
therapy is unavailable.
(J Clin Psychiatry 2002; 63:138145)
| home | about us | clinical IVR systems | research | education | experience |
| publications & presentations | contact us | privacy policy | client login |
© Healthcare Technology Systems
|