4.3 Article

Internet-Based CBT for Somatic Symptom Distress (iSOMA) in Emerging Adults: A Randomized Controlled Trial

Journal

JOURNAL OF CONSULTING AND CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGY
Volume 90, Issue 4, Pages 353-365

Publisher

AMER PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOC
DOI: 10.1037/ccp0000707

Keywords

somatic symptom disorder; internet intervention; cognitive behavioral therapy; emerging adults; randomized controlled trial

Funding

  1. Johannes Gutenberg-University of Mainz
  2. German health insurance company BARMER

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This randomized controlled trial tested the efficacy of a guided cognitive-behavioral internet intervention for somatic symptom distress in emerging adults at risk for somatic symptom disorder. The results showed that participants in the intervention group had significantly greater improvements in their symptoms compared to the waitlist control group. The intervention was well-received and satisfaction was high.
Objective: Persistent somatic symptom distress is common in emerging adults and is associated with adverse health outcomes and impairment. Internet-based interventions could help to prevent burden and chronicity. This randomized controlled trial tested the efficacy of a guided, cognitive-behavioral internet intervention for somatic symptom distress (iSOMA) in emerging adults at risk for somatic symptom disorder compared to a waitlist control condition. Method: 158 participants (N = 156 analyzed; 24.53 years, 83.3% female) with multiple somatic symptoms were recruited among German-speaking universities and randomly allocated to either receive the 8-week iSOMA intervention with psychologist support or the waitlist, both with access to treatment as usual. Primary outcomes were somatic symptom distress Patient Health Questionnaire, somatic symptom scale (PHQ-15) and psychobehavioral features of somatic symptom disorder-12 (SSD-12), assessed at baseline and 8-weeks postrandomization. Secondary outcomes included depression, anxiety, illness worries, functional impairment, and attitudes toward psychological treatment. Results: Participants in the iSOMA group showed significantly greater improvements (ps < .001) in primary outcomes (PHQ-15: d = 0.70 [0.36, 1.05], SSD-12: d = 0.65 [0.30, 0.99], and secondary outcomes (ps < .05; d = 0.41-0.52) compared to the waitlist, except for attitudes toward psychological treatment (p = .944). Satisfaction with iSOMA was high (91.0%), most participants (72.8%) completed at least 4 of 7 modules and negative treatment effects were infrequent (14.9%). Conclusions: Our intervention had a substantial positive impact on somatic symptom distress across a broad range of persistent physical symptoms in a vulnerable target group, opening up promising possibilities for indicative prevention and blended care for somatic symptom disorders. What is the public health significance of this article? A guided cognitive-behavioral internet intervention could help to effectively reduce somatic symptom distress as a significant public health problem in emerging adults and provide a low-threshold treatment option to engage first-time help seekers.

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