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UvA-DARE (Digital Academic Repository) Modular CBT for Youth Social Anxiety Disorder: A Case Series Examining Initial Effectiveness Telman, L.G.E.; Van Steensel, F.J.A.; Verveen, A.J.C.; Bögels, S.M.; Maric, M. DOI 10.1080/23794925.2020.1727791 Publication date 2020 Document Version Final published version Published in Evidence-Based Practice in Child and Adolescent Mental Health License CC BY-NC-ND Link to publication Citation for published version (APA): Telman, L. G. E., Van Steensel, F. J. A., Verveen, A. J. C., Bögels, S. M., & Maric, M. (2020). Modular CBT for Youth Social Anxiety Disorder: A Case Series Examining Initial Effectiveness. Evidence-Based Practice in Child and Adolescent Mental Health, 5(1), 16-27. https://doi.org/10.1080/23794925.2020.1727791 General rights It is not permitted to download or to forward/distribute the text or part of it without the consent of the author(s) and/or copyright holder(s), other than for strictly personal, individual use, unless the work is under an open content license (like Creative Commons). Disclaimer/Complaints regulations If you believe that digital publication of certain material infringes any of your rights or (privacy) interests, please let the Library know, stating your reasons. In case of a legitimate complaint, the Library will make the material inaccessible and/or remove it from the website. Please Ask the Library: https://uba.uva.nl/en/contact, or a letter to: Library of the University of Amsterdam, Secretariat, Singel 425, 1012 WP Amsterdam, The Netherlands. You will be contacted as soon as possible. UvA-DARE is a service provided by the library of the University of Amsterdam (https://dare.uva.nl) Download date:26 Sep 2022 EVIDENCE-BASED PRACTICE IN CHILD AND ADOLESCENT MENTAL HEALTH 2020, VOL. 5, NO. 1, 16–27 https://doi.org/10.1080/23794925.2020.1727791 Modular CBT for Youth Social Anxiety Disorder: A Case Series Examining Initial Effectiveness a a b a,b,c Liesbeth G. E. Telman , Francisca J. A. Van Steensel , Ariënne J. C. Verveen , Susan M. Bögels , and Marija Maricb a b Research Institute of Child Development and Education, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands; Department of Developmental Psychology, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands; cUvA Minds, Academic Outpatient Child and Adolescent Treatment Center, Amsterdam, The Netherlands ABSTRACT KEYWORDS Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) is the most efficacious treatment for childhood anxiety CBT; social anxiety disorder; disorders. At the same time, several studies showed that for children and adolescents with social children and adolescents; anxiety disorder (SAD), standard protocolized CBT seems to be less efficacious than for youth with modular treatment; other types of anxiety disorders, suggesting that children with SAD need a different approach. The mindfulness purpose of this study was to examine the effectiveness of a modularized cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) for children with SAD, including mindfulness. Ten children and adolescents (50% girls, aged 8–17 years) referred for SAD were measured at pretreatment, posttreatment and 10 weeks follow-up. Results showed that 5 youths (50%) were free of their SAD posttreatment, and 8 (80%) at follow-up. Clinically meaningful improvements from pretest to follow-up were found in 90% and 60% of the cases, for the total anxiety symptom score and social anxiety symptom score, respectively. Pre-post-follow-up group analyses revealed significant improve- ments in SAD severity (combined parent and child report) and social anxiety symptoms across child, mother, and father report. The remission rate of 80% and substantial social anxiety symptom decline is promising, providing a starting point for improving treatments of youth with SAD. Social anxiety disorder (SAD) is one of the most Webb, 2004; Wittchen & Fehm, 2003). If common mental disorders and anxiety disorders untreated, SAD generally persists in adulthood, in children and adolescents, with prevalence rates relates to reduced quality of life, and does not reaching 10% in adolescence (Burstein et al., 2011; remit until up to 40 years after onset (Comer & Kessler et al., 2012; Merikangas et al., 2010). The Olfson, 2010). Thus, there is a clear need for DSM-5 (American Psychiatric Association [APA], effective treatment of SAD early in development. 2013) characterizes SAD as a persistent, intense Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) is the most fear of social situations in which the individual efficacious treatment for anxiety disorders (ADs) maybenegatively evaluated by others. In children, in children and adolescents, with moderate to this fear must occur in peer settings and not just in large effect sizes compared to other therapies interactions with adults (APA, 2013). SAD is (Reynolds, Wilson, Austin, & Hooper, 2012) and a typical childhood onset disorder, as first inci- approximately 50–70% of children being free of dence after the age of 21 is very low (Bögels their primary AD after treatment (e.g., Bodden et al., 2010; Burstein et al., 2011). Untreated SAD et al., 2008; Hudson et al., 2015a; In-Albon & in children and adolescents leads to negative con- Schneider, 2007). CBT for childhood ADs gener- sequences such as impairments in interpersonal ally consists of a “skill-building” phase in which functioning, loneliness, school refusal and drop- children acquire skills that reduce anxiety (e.g., out, lower educational level, subsequent anxiety, psycho-education, cognitive restructuring, coping depressive, and substance use disorders (e.g., skills), and an “exposure” phase in which children Beidel, Turner, & Morris, 1999; Burstein et al., are gradually exposed to their feared situation and 2011; Kendall, Safford, Flannery-Schroeder, & practice new skills (Detweiler, Comer, Crum, & CONTACT Marija Maric m.maric@uva.nl Department of Developmental Psychology, University of Amsterdam, Nieuwe Achtergracht 129B, Amsterdam 1018 WT, The Netherlands ©2020 The Author(s). Published with license by Taylor & Francis Group, LLC. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc- nd/4.0/), which permits non-commercial re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited, and is not altered, transformed, or built upon in any way. EVIDENCE-BASED PRACTICE IN CHILD AND ADOLESCENT MENTAL HEALTH 17 Albano, 2014). Nevertheless, a substantial number adult and youth anxiety (disorders), it has been of studies from multiple sites (e.g., Crawley, suggested that these clients could benefit from Beidas, Benjamin, Martin, & Kendall, 2008; mindfulness interventions, especially when inte- Ginsburg et al., 2011; Hudson et al., 2015a, grated with existing CBT protocols (Maric, 2015b; Wergeland et al., 2016) have shown that Willard, Wrzesien, & Bögels, 2019;vanBockstaele delivery of this general form of CBT is less suc- &Bögels,2014). Mindfulness as a method implies cessful for SAD than for other types of ADs in welcoming daily hassles and stressors with atten- both children and adults, even at long-term fol- tion, acceptance and calmness. By increasing aware- low-up (Kodal et al., 2018). ness for the present moment and encouraging the Onestrategy to enhance therapy outcomes that is individual to divert its attention to internal experi- recently gaining in popularity (Ng & Weisz, 2016)is ences and environmental stimuli, mindfulness may to deliver therapy in a more individualized way. In be a method to target (distorted) cognitive pro- general, this meanstailoringtheselection andimple- cesses (van Bockstaele & Bögels, 2014). This may mentation of therapy techniques to the personal sound paradoxical as CBT models for SAD (e.g., needs of the clients (Crawley et al., 2008; Hudson Clark & Wells, 1995) view the tendency to focus on et al., 2015b; Kendall, Settipani, & Cummings, 2012). internal experiences as one of the key mechanisms With regard to CBT manuals, these are individua- that keeps the problem going. However, in essence lized by dividing it into separate self-contained mod- and practice, the two approaches (CBT and mind- ules such as cognitive therapy and problem-solving fulness) are more complementary than contrasting. skills, that can be matchedtotheindividualstrengths Mindfulness teaches the clients to attend to all their andneeds, and used multiple times or not at all (Ng experiences – cognitions and emotions – con- &Weisz,2016).Suchmodulartherapiesforchildren sciously and non-judgmentally, providing clarity, with anxiety disorders, depression, trauma, and/or in this way either helping the client to let go of conduct problems have so far shown to offer incre- the disturbing thoughts or identifying thoughts that mental benefit over usual care and protocolized can be further actively challenged in cognitive ther- CBT,andasteeperdecreaseinchild’sanxietysymp- apy. Earlier on, Bögels and Mansell (2004) proposed tomsthanthestandardtreatment(Chorpita,Taylor, six different change mechanisms of attentional pro- Francis, Moffitt, & Austin, 2004; Chorpita et al., cesses training in SAD: reducing hypervigilance by 2013; Weisz et al., 2012). For children with SAD, focusing on broader aspects of self and environ- modular therapy could, for example, provide thera- ment; reducing attentional avoidance; reducing self- pists withmoretimetoinvestinsymptomsthathave focused attention; increasing mindfulness to coun- previously been identified as needing more attention ter mindless ruminating; increasing attention con- duringtreatmentinchildrenwithSADsuchaschal- trol; and increasing self-esteem through enhanced lengingcommoncognitivebiasesandinbuildingthe concentration (also called “flow”). In line with this therapeutic alliance (Crawleyet al., 2008). Moreover, reasoning, treatment of SAD in adults with mind- modular therapy could also support trends in usual fulness was found to be more effective than waitlist clinical practice, in whichtherapists–possibly dueto in decreasing social anxiety symptoms (Bögels, time constraints – tend to use parts of treatment 2006). In addition, the mindfulness groups demon- manuals instead of the whole manual (Chu et al., strated similar improvements when compared to 2015). Concluding from this literature, modular (group) CBT (Goldin et al., 2016;Kocovski, therapy appears to have the potential to improve Fleming, Hawley, Huta, & Antony, 2013). At this treatment outcomes for children dealing with psy- moment, empirical evidence regarding the efficacy chopathology, and may be a promising strategy for of mindfulness in children and adolescents with improving effectiveness in particular for children ADis lacking (Maric et al., 2019). S with SADs. In the present study, we incorporated these Another recent line of thinking regarding the recent suggestions in the treatment of youth with treatment of psychopathology has focused on the anxiety disorders. We implemented a modular implementation of innovative therapy techniques, CBT adapted from the Dutch CBT manual such as mindfulness approaches. With regard to Discussing+Doing = Daring (Bögels, 2008) 18 L. G. E. TELMAN ET AL. including modules such as cognitive therapy and e.g., not daring to play with other kids to not going exposure; and additional elements of mindfulness to school) and rated their anxiety as severely therapy. Accordingly, we aimed to explore: (i) the impairing (using Clinical Severity Rating of effectiveness of modularized CBT (including ADIS-C/P; Silverman & Albano, 1996) for their mindfulness) in these 10 youths; and (ii) which daily functioning. The average CSR for both modules and treatment components were used in study completers (n = 10) as well as the partici- each participant. The expectation is that explora- pants who were excluded (n = 5, as 1 ADIS-C/P on tion of these questions in children and adolescents pre-treatment was missing) was 6.8. with SAD on a single-case level will provide us The children and adolescents were aged with initial information about the utility of 8–17 years (mean age = 11.70, SD = 2.69), 50% a modular CBT approach for treating SAD in girls. The majority of the sample had a Dutch youth. ethnicity (n = 8); two participants indicated Asian or South-American ethnicity. Both parents were included in the study, the majority were Method married (90%), and their educational levels were Participants and procedure on average (distribution of, respectively, low- middle-high educational level for mothers: 11%- This study is part of a larger currently ongoing 44%-44%; for fathers: 30%-30%-40%). Participants study examining working mechanisms of modular- were treated by eight different therapists; partici- ized CBT for childhood ADs in a sample of at least pants 2 and 8, and 6 and 7 had the same therapist. 100childrenintheagerange7–18 years, with All therapists were female, had a master’s degree in various primary anxiety disorders. The inclusion psychology, their ages ranged from 23 to 59 years criteria for the current study were a) primary diag- (M=35.63, SD = 11.64), and experience as a men- nosis of SAD based on DSM-5 criteria (APA, 2013); tal health-care professional ranged from 1 to b) no comorbid pervasive developmental disorder; 40 years (M = 12.38, SD = 13.35). c) having completed at least a pretest and posttest measure; and d) IQ > 80. After the final assessment Measures point, families received a gift card of 20 euros. Participants gave active informed consent, and ethi- Anxiety diagnosis cal approval was obtained from the Ethical SAD and comorbid disorders were assessed with Committee of the University of Amsterdam. the Dutch version of the Structured Clinical Initially, 16 participants were selected based on Interview for DSM-5 Disorders for Children their SAD. Six participants were not included in (Wante, Braet, Bögels, & Roelofs, in press). the current study because of the incomplete assess- Parent and child reports were combined based ments at pre- and post-treatment and/or follow-up on standard procedures used in the SCID-junior. (either child or parent report, and/or audiotapes or The SCID-junior was used instead of the com- therapist information was missing). In comparison monly used Anxiety Disorders Interview to the 10 study completers, the six participants Schedule – Child/Parent Versions (ADIS-C/P; who were excluded had on average the same diag- Silverman & Albano, 1996) because the SCID- nosis severity at pretest, were one year older, and junior is based on DSM-5 instead of DSM-IV received fewer treatment sessions. With regard to criteria. In order to compare the severity of diag- treatment outcomes (child and parent data were noses to previous studies, we additionally deter- collapsed due to some missing data), it was found mined an impairment score between 0 and 8, that four out of six were free from their social comparable to the Clinical Severity Rating (CSR) anxiety disorder at follow-up and three out of six of the ADIS-C/P. Research investigating the psy- scored below the SCARED cutoff for social anxiety chometric properties of the SCID-junior is at follow-up. None of the 10 included cases were ongoing (C. Braet, personal communication, suicidal or housebound; however, all participants July 12, 2017). In our larger, currently ongoing did avoid one or more situations (ranging from, study (Van Steensel, Telman, Maric, & Bögels, in
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