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Behavioural activation for depression: an update of meta-analysis of effectiveness and sub group analysis

  • D. Ekers
  • , L. Webster
  • , Annemieke Van Straten
  • , Pim Cuijpers
  • , D. Richards
  • , S. Gilbody

    Research output: Journal contributionsJournal articlesResearchpeer-review

    476 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    Background

    Depression is a common, disabling condition for which psychological treatments are recommended. Behavioural activation has attracted increased interest in recent years. It has been over 5 years since our meta-analyses summarised the evidence supporting and this systematic review updates those findings and examines moderators of treatment effect.

    Method

    Randomised trials of behavioural activation for depression versus controls or anti-depressant medication were identified using electronic database searches, previous reviews and reference lists. Data on symptom level and study level moderators were extracted and analysed using meta-analysis, sub-group analysis and meta-regression respectively.

    Results

    Twenty six randomised controlled trials including 1524 subjects were included in this meta-analysis. A random effects meta-analysis of symptom level post treatment showed behavioural activation to be superior to controls (SMD −0.74 CI −0.91 to −0.56, k = 25, N = 1088) and medication (SMD −0.42 CI −0.83 to-0.00, k = 4, N = 283). Study quality was low in the majority of studies and follow- up time periods short. There was no indication of publication bias and subgroup analysis showed limited association between moderators and effect size.

    Conclusions

    The results in this meta-analysis support and strengthen the evidence base indicating Behavioural Activation is an effective treatment for depression. Further high quality research with longer term follow-up is needed to strengthen the evidence base.
    Original languageEnglish
    Article numbere100100
    JournalPLoS ONE
    Volume9
    Issue number6
    Number of pages11
    ISSN1932-6203
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 17.06.2014

    Research areas and keywords

    • Health sciences
    • Psychology

    ASJC Scopus Subject Areas

    • General

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