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Psychological and educational interventions for preventing depression in children and adolescents

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Abstract

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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 editorial base in July 2010. Update searches of MEDLINE, EMBASE, PsycINFO and ERIC were conducted by the authors in September 2009. Conference abstracts, reference lists of included studies and reviews were searched and experts in the field contacted.

Selection criteria

Randomised controlled trials of psychological or educational prevention programmes, or both, compared with placebo, any comparison intervention, or no intervention for young people aged 5 to 19 years‐old, who did not currently meet diagnostic criteria for depression or who were below the clinical range on standardised, validated, and reliable rating scales of depression, or both, were included.

Data collection and analysis

Two authors independently assessed studies for inclusion and rated their quality. Sample sizes were adjusted to take account of cluster designs and multiple comparisons. We contacted study authors for additional information where needed. 

Main results

Fifty‐three studies including 14,406 participants were included in the analysis. There were only six studies with clear allocation concealment, participants and assessors were mostly not blind to the intervention or blinding was unclear so that the overall risk of bias was moderately high. Sixteen studies including 3240 participants reported outcomes on depressive diagnosis. The risk of having a depressive disorder post‐intervention was reduced immediately compared with no intervention (15 studies; 3115 participants risk difference (RD) ‐0.09; 95% confidence interval (CI) ‐0.14 to ‐0.05; P<0.0003), at three to nine months (14 studies; 1842 participants; RD ‐0.11; 95% CI ‐0.16 to ‐0.06) and at 12 months (10 studies; 1750 participants; RD ‐0.06; 95% CI ‐0.11 to ‐0.01). There was no evidence for continued efficacy at 24 months (eight studies; 2084 participant; RD ‐0.01; 95% CI ‐0.04 to 0.03) but limited evidence of efficacy at 36 months (two studies; 464 participants; RD ‐0.10; 95% CI ‐0.19 to ‐0.02). There was significant heterogeneity in all these findings. There was no evidence of efficacy in the few studies that compared intervention with placebo or attention controls.

Authors' conclusions

There is some evidence from this review that targeted and universal depression prevention programmes may prevent the onset of depressive disorders compared with no intervention. However, allocation concealment is unclear in most studies, and there is heterogeneity in the findings. The persistence of findings suggests that this is real and not a placebo effect. 

PICOs

Population
Intervention
Comparison
Outcome

The PICO model is widely used and taught in evidence-based health care as a strategy for formulating questions and search strategies and for characterizing clinical studies or meta-analyses. PICO stands for four different potential components of a clinical question: Patient, Population or Problem; Intervention; Comparison; Outcome.

See more on using PICO in the Cochrane Handbook.

Plain language summary

Psychological and educational interventions for preventing depression in children and adolescents

Depressive disorder is common and has a major impact on the functioning of young people. The aim of this review was to assess the effectiveness of programmes designed to prevent its onset.

We found that, compared with no intervention, psychological depression prevention programmes were effective in preventing depression with a number of studies showing a decrease in episodes of depressive illness over a year. There were some problems with the way the studies were done but despite this the results are encouraging. We found data to support both targeted and universal programmes, which is important as universal programmes are likely to be easier to implement. We recommend that further research be undertaken to identify the most effective programmes and to test these in the real world.