Efficacy of Applied Relaxation as indicated preventive intervention in individuals at increased risk for mental disorders: A randomized controlled trial

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Contributors

Abstract

The objective was to examine the efficacy of Applied Relaxation (AR) as indicated preventive intervention to reduce psychopathological symptoms and prevent incident mental disorders. In a parallel-group randomized controlled trial, N = 277 adults with elevated tension/distress, anxiety, or depressive symptomatology (Depression-Anxiety-Stress Scale, DASS-21) but no 12-month DSM-5 diagnosis of any mental disorder assessed via standardized interview (DIA-X-5) were randomized to an intervention group (IG; n = 139) receiving group-based AR training, or an assessment-only control group (CG, n = 138). Self-report questionnaires at baseline, post (immediately after the 10 week intervention or a similar time frame in CG) and 12-month follow-up included the DASS-21 as primary outcome measure of intervention efficacy. Incident subthreshold and threshold mental disorders were assessed via DIA-X-5 at 12-month follow-up as primary outcome of prevention efficacy. Intervention and prevention effects were examined on an intent-to-treat basis with missing data replaced using chained multiple imputation. Mixed-model analyses revealed accelerated symptom improvement in IG versus CG with a medium baseline-to-post between-group effect size (d = 0.59, 95%CI: 0.36–0.82). Logistic regression analysis revealed a significantly lower incidence rate for (sub-)threshold mental disorders until 12-month follow-up in IG (34.7%) versus CG (49.3%; Odds Ratio: 0.54, 95%CI: 0.31–0.92, Risk Ratio: 0.70, 95%CI: 0.51–0.96, Risk Difference = −0.15, 95%CI: −0.28 to −0.02). Group-based AR as a promising indicative preventive intervention should be tested in long-term studies and relative to a credible alternative intervention to assure that the intervention effects are not entirely due to demand characteristics, expectancies, or non-specific effects.

Details

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)104162
Journal Behaviour research and therapy
Volume157
Early online date20 Jul 2022
Publication statusPublished - Oct 2022
Peer-reviewedYes

External IDs

Scopus 85135564526
unpaywall 10.1016/j.brat.2022.104162
Mendeley cd27960b-8156-37ee-b4f7-7cf2683338c0
ORCID /0000-0002-9687-5527/work/142235252

Keywords

Research priority areas of TU Dresden

Sustainable Development Goals

Keywords

  • RCT, Prevention, Psychopathology, Adults

Library keywords