Psychological therapies for the treatment of post-traumatic stress disorder in children and adolescents

No SJR dataDec 14, 2012The Cochrane database of systematic reviews

Psychological treatments for post-traumatic stress disorder in children and teens

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Abstract

In a review of 14 studies with 758 participants, psychological therapies showed significant improvement in PTSD symptoms compared to control groups.

  • Improvement in PTSD symptoms was associated with psychological therapy, with a notable odds ratio of 4.21 for better outcomes compared to controls.
  • Cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT) was identified as the most effective psychological therapy, with significant improvements lasting up to one year.
  • PTSD symptom scores decreased significantly within one month (SMD -1.34) and continued to show improvement up to one year (SMD -0.73) in the CBT group.
  • Anxiety and depression symptoms also showed significant reductions following psychological therapy, with SMDs of -0.57 and -0.74, respectively.
  • No adverse effects were reported from the psychological therapies assessed.
  • The findings are limited by potential biases in the studies and a lack of evidence regarding the comparative effectiveness of different psychological therapies.

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