Psychological and educational interventions for preventing depression in children and adolescents.
@article{Merry2011PsychologicalAE,
title={Psychological and educational interventions for preventing depression in children and adolescents.},
author={Sally Nicola Merry and Sarah Elisabeth Hetrick and Georgina Cox and Tessa Brudevold-Iversen and Julliet J Bir and Heather McDowell},
journal={The Cochrane database of systematic reviews},
year={2011},
volume={12},
pages={
CD003380
}
}BACKGROUND
Depression is common in young people, has a marked negative impact and is associated with self-harm and suicide. Preventing its onset would be an important advance in public health.
OBJECTIVES
To determine whether psychological or educational interventions, or both, are effective in preventing the onset of depressive disorder in children and adolescents.
SEARCH METHODS
The Cochrane Depression, Anxiety and Neurosis Review Group's trials registers (CCDANCTR) were searched at the…
258 Citations
Review: psychological and educational interventions may reduce risk of depressive disorders in children and adolescents
- Psychology, MedicineEvidence Based Mental Health
- 2012
Question
Question: Are psychological and educational interventions effective for preventing depression in children and adolescents?
Outcomes: Depressive disorder; depressive symptoms. Diagnoses…
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- 2017
Preventing depression and anxiety in young people: a review of the joint efficacy of universal, selective and indicated prevention
- Psychology, MedicinePsychological Medicine
- 2015
Universal, selective and indicated prevention interventions are efficacious in reducing internalizing disorders and symptoms in the short term, and might be considered as repeated exposures in school settings across childhood and adolescence.
Interventions for preventing relapse and recurrence of a depressive disorder in children and adolescents.
- Psychology, MedicineThe Cochrane database of systematic reviews
- 2012
There is little evidence to conclude which type of treatment approach is most effective in preventing relapse or recurrence of depressive episodes in children and adolescents, and the designs implemented in trials was diverse, which limits the generalisability of the results.
School-based depression and anxiety prevention programs: An updated systematic review and meta-analysis.
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[Efficacy of universal and selective prevention on depression in children and adolescents. A systematic review].
- Psychology, MedicineZeitschrift fur Kinder- und Jugendpsychiatrie und Psychotherapie
- 2012
Evidence was found for selective, indicated, and universal prevention in comparison to untreated control groups for efficacy in reducing depressive symptoms in children and adolescents.
Prevention of depression and anxiety: is the whole better than the sum of the parts?
- Psychology, MedicineEvidence-Based Mental Health
- 2016
The combined effects of prevention programmes on depression and anxiety are examined and potential for prevention by using effective treatment strategies for the disorders is identified.
L21 Interventions for preventing relapse and recurrence of a depressive disorder in children and adolescents
- Psychology, Medicine
- 2013
There is little evidence to conclude which type of treatment approach is most effective in preventing relapse or recurrence of depressive episodes in children and adolescents, but limited trials found that antidepressant medication reduces the chance of relapse-recurrence in the future.
The treatment of suicidality in adolescents by psychosocial interventions for depression: A systematic literature review
- Psychology, MedicineThe Australian and New Zealand journal of psychiatry
- 2016
There is evidence to suggest that Cognitive Behavioural Therapy interventions produce pre–post reductions in suicidality with moderate effect sizes and are at least as efficacious as pharmacotherapy in reducing suicideality; however, it is unclear whether these effects are sustained.
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