Treatment of Depression in Primary Care with Computerized Psychological Therapies: Systematic Reviews.
Francisco Rodriguez-PulidoGema CastilloSofiane HamriouiLaura Delgado MartinPilar Vazquez-BeltránIsabel de la Torre DíezManuel A Franco-MartínPublished in: Journal of medical systems (2020)
Depression is one of the most important causes of disability due to illness in our environment. The primary care health system receives a high percentage of this consultation about psychological distress. Often this end in a pharmacological overtreatment in patients with mild depression, due to a lack of access to alternative tools for management. To analyze the evidence that exists by now about the effectiveness of computerized psychological therapies, in people with depression in primary care setting. The search process was mainly done through MEDLINE and Cochrane using keywords such as: "depression", "treatment", "primary care", "online", "internet", "computerized", "Cognitive Behavioral Therapy" and delimiting the search by years and types of studies. The Oxman quality scale was used to analyze quality of Systematic Reviews (SR). 11 previous SR were analyzed. Almost all research is experimental and has not been implemented in the public health network except in the United Kingdom, where there is a tradition in the use of the Beating the Blues program. It requires research in our country and development of programs in Spanish, or adaptation of those of other countries, to test the effectiveness in our health system and to study, in turn, the cost-efficiency. But it is proven to be effective in reducing depressive symptoms and must be study as a possible tool to be introduced in the management of depression in non-specialized care.
Keyphrases
- primary care
- depressive symptoms
- sleep quality
- public health
- systematic review
- palliative care
- quality improvement
- social support
- randomized controlled trial
- healthcare
- multiple sclerosis
- clinical decision support
- physical activity
- social media
- obsessive compulsive disorder
- chronic pain
- global health
- pain management
- single molecule