The British Journal of Psychiatry (2008) 193: 270-271. doi: 10.1192/bjp.bp.108.054080
© 2008 The Royal College of Psychiatrists
Pros and cons of online cognitive–behavioural therapy
Gerhard Andersson, PhD
Department of Behavioural Sciences and Learning, Swedish Institute for
Disability Research, Linköping University, and Department of Clinical
Neuroscience, Karolinska Institutet, Sweden
Pim Cuijpers, PhD
Department of Clinical Psychology, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, The
Netherlands
Correspondence:
Professor Gerhard Andersson, Department of Behavioural Sciences and Learning,
Linköping University, SE-581 83 Linköping, Sweden. Email:
gerhard.andersson{at}liu.se
Declaration of interest
None.
Gerhard Andersson (pictured) is Professor of Clinical Psychology at
Linköping University, Sweden. He is also Guest Professor at Karolinska
Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden. Pim Cuijpers is Professor of Clinical
Psychology and Head of the Department of Clinical Psychology at the Vrije
Universiteit Amsterdam, The Netherlands. Both are active researchers in the
field of online cognitive–behavioural therapy.

ABSTRACT
Online cognitive–behavioural therapy (CBT) for depression
has the
potential to serve as an important addition to the
care of people with mild to
moderate depression. Although some
studies show promising results, the need
for proper diagnoses
and human guidance must be considered when interpreting
the
modest effects found in studies with little or no guidance from
a
therapist.

INTRODUCTION
In research on the effects of cognitive–behavioural therapy
(CBT)
there has been a long history of investigating different
ways of treatment
delivery, including individual, group, telephone
and computer-delivered CBT.
The most recent addition to this
is to use computers and the
internet.
1 In a
recent issue of
the
British Journal of Psychiatry, promising
follow-up data
were presented from a previous trial on the effects of a
self-administered
internet programme (MoodGYM) for symptoms of
depression.
2 As
major depression is a costly disorder, both in terms of human
suffering and
from an economic perspective, any effort to disseminate
evidence-based
low-cost interventions represents a welcome
contribution to healthcare. If it
should be the case that online
automated self-help programmes work and also
lead to long-term
benefits, we would definitely be in a position to consider
not
if, but how soon, we should implement this treatment on a wide
scale.
However, we are not there yet and in this editorial
we will comment on where
we believe the new field of online
CBT stands now and what should be
considered when evaluating
the emerging evidence in favour of online CBT.

Public health implications of online automated self-help programmes
Even a minor improvement of depression symptoms could have a
large impact
on the disease burden of depression if the treatment
is safe and cheap. This
is especially true when such an intervention
can be disseminated to large
parts of the general population,
as is the case with online automated
self-help programmes.
It could very well be that self-administered programmes
such
as Mood-GYM could serve as a starting point for seeking more
effective
evidence-based treatment. As standards for dissemination
and consumer
information regarding internet treatments are
yet to be developed, the study
on 1-year outcome from the MoodGYM
researchers is a welcome
addition.
2 However,
MoodGYM is probably
not as effective as other online depression programmes
that
are delivered with therapist
guidance,
3 at least
when it comes
to diagnosed major depression. This leaves us with numerous
opportunities and challenges in the future. Stepped-care approaches
could
include `steps' of online treatment with gradually increasing
support and
programme length, and we also would like to see
exploration of combined
treatments where online CBT is combined
with selective serotonin reuptake
inhibitors or other evidence-based
approaches for the treatment of depression.
Such stepped-care
delivery would not only provide opportunities to deliver CBT
on a large scale at relatively low cost, but would also make
it possible to
follow up patients more systematically and perhaps
offer new possibilities for
relapse prevention.
The field of online/internet-delivered CBT is growing rapidly with several
randomised trials appearing each year. Although the quality of these trials is
not always good, the speed of the research makes online CBT an alternative to
consider in evidence-based treatment
guidelines,1,4
hence increasing the possibility that online CBT becomes part of regular
healthcare. Public health implications of making evidence-based psychological
treatments available on the internet could be substantial in terms of reaching
people in need and saving costs. However, some of the published trials on
online CBT deal not with depression as a medical diagnosis, but rather with
mild subclinical symptoms of depression. This fact together with some other
potential problems with online CBT will be commented on next.

Is it really depression?
Readers of this
Journal can most likely recognise a `depressed'
patient in front of them and would assume that a paper mentioning
depression
in its title is usually about clinican-diagnosed
depression. However, most
studies of online CBT for depression
deal with self-reported symptoms of
depression and not diagnosed
depression in the strict sense. Community
screening questionnaires
can be helpful and can to some extent identify
depressed patients,
but they do not replace diagnosis made by a clinician.
Simply
put, we cannot know if people included in the majority of trials
of
online CBT were clinically depressed or
not,
5 and this
critique is also relevant for studies of
MoodGYM.
2,6
Clinicians
in psychiatry and general practice will need more convincing
evidence that online CBT can help their depressed patients.
On the other hand,
subclinical levels of depressive symptoms
might be a worthwhile target for
public health interventions,
and it is possible that automated online CBT
programmes could
be suitable for that purpose. However, especially in
research,
but also in the clinic, it is important to know the actual diagnoses
of patients, in order to get an estimate of the clinical relevance
of the
populations and the impact of the intervention.

Different ways of delivering CBT over the internet
Although online CBT is a new field, there are already many different
approaches available, even for the treatment of depression;
a book-length
review was recently presented by Marks
et
al,
7 and a
controlled trial has been published in the
Journal which
involved
guided self-help using support via
email.
8 In fact,
this trial was found to have had substantially larger effects
than other
internet treatments for depression in a systematic
review.
3 More
recently, large within-group effect sizes were
reported in a study which
compared group and internet
treatment.
9 This is
not the only trial showing equal or even slightly superior
long-term effects
of online
v. face-to-face
treatment.
10
A critical issue here is whether different online depression treatments
differ in terms of effects, and how these differences can be explained. First,
effect sizes can be small in some programmes, which might be explained by the
characteristics of the sample included. Second, drop-out rates can be
substantial outside of a research
trial,11 even
though acceptable drop-out rates were obtained in the original research
trial.6 Third, and
perhaps this pertains to other online treatments as well, studies on long-term
effects might not be valid, as help-seeking for regular CBT can increase
following online
CBT.12 In summary,
it is still unclear whether mainly self-administrated programmes are as
effective as other interventions in the treatment of symptoms of depression,
and it is even less clear regarding clinician-diagnosed depression.

What is the role of the therapist?
Mackinnon
et
al2 commented
that the impact of the telephone
support given in the trial must be considered
when interpreting
their findings. A growing database on online CBT clearly
shows
that some form of guidance is needed, in particular for patients
with
diagnosed major depression. In fact, the published evidence
regarding online
CBT for depression without therapist support
is extremely weak and drop-out
rates are unacceptably high.
Spek
et al, in their meta-analysis,
clearly showed that programmes
without support were markedly less
effective.
3 However,
even
with therapist support, CBT over the internet is still saving
much of the
therapist's time. This is a different story to
claiming that a non-guided
programme for which drop-out rates
are extremely
high
13 is
effective, with less than a quarter
of the randomised participants completing
the programme, rendering
interpretation of the effects impossible.
Missing data have huge implications for data analyses of trials, and
although the approach suggested by Mackinnon et al arguably can
handle this, this does not solve the basic problem of missing data. Any method
of dealing with missing data, even the most sophisticated ones, cannot solve
the problem that we do not know what has happened to the people who have
dropped out. We can estimate what would have happened if they had not dropped
out, but that remains an estimate, nothing more. When drop-out rates are very
high, uncertainty regarding the accuracy of estimates increases
proportionately, and no statistical method can solve this problem. An
additional problem is that studies that include regular clinic use (e.g. a
Dutch programme called
Interapy14)have
much lower drop-out rates in their online CBT treatments,

Conclusion
Recent research suggests that even very minimal interventions
can have
significant effects on depressive symptoms. However,
it also points at the
many problematic issues that this type
of research is struggling with,
including loss of data, diagnostic
issues, small effects and acknowledging the
need for human
support in a condition such as depression, where motivation
to
change is a major issue. These reservations should be discussed
openly by
researchers and clinicians in the e-health field.
However, once these issues
are resolved, online CBT should
be considered as part of regular healthcare at
various levels,
including general practice settings, where most patients with
mild to moderate depression are seen and treated.

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Received for publication April 24, 2008.
Revision received June 16, 2008.
Accepted for publication June 18, 2008.
Related articles in BJP:
- From the Editor's desk
- Peter Tyrer
BJP 2008 193: 350.
[Full Text]
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P. Tyrer
From the Editor's desk
The British Journal of Psychiatry,
July 1, 2009;
195(1):
96 - 96.
[Full Text]
[PDF]
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