Trauma-Focused Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy for Children and Adolescents: Assessing the Evidence
Abstract
Objective
Methods
Results
Conclusions
Feature | Description |
---|---|
Service definition | TF-CBT is a direct service for children and adolescents and their nonoffending caregivers. The approach uses cognitive-behavioral principles and exposure techniques to address symptoms of posttraumatic stress following trauma exposure as well as symptoms of depression, behavior problems, and caregiver difficulties. Key elements of the intervention include psychoeducation (for example, common reactions to trauma exposure), coping skills (for example, relaxation, identification of feelings, and cognitive coping), gradual exposure (for example, through imagination or in-vivo exposure), cognitive processing of trauma-related thoughts and beliefs, and caregiver involvement (for example, parent training and conjoint child-parent sessions). Treatment strategies such as behavior modeling and body safety skills training are also used. To accommodate a variety of traumatic experiences, TF-CBT includes general psychoeducational materials with recommendations for tailoring treatment for individuals who have experienced physical abuse, sexual abuse, interpersonal violence, or natural disasters. |
Service goals | To provide a process in which the child and his or her nonoffending caregivers learn about trauma and develop strategies to reduce related stress and modulate and control associated feelings and thoughts; to provide structured opportunities for children and adolescents, with the support of their nonoffending caregivers, to process the trauma and learn to cope with stimuli that may lead to traumatic reactions; to support the child or adolescent in developing and maintaining a secure sense of safety as well as adaptive social skills |
Populations | Children and adolescents who have experienced trauma and have trauma-related symptoms, including posttraumatic stress disorder |
Settings of servicedelivery | Outpatient facilities, schools, client homes, individual and group therapy settings (research was limited to outpatient settings) |
Description of TF-CBT
Five core elements of the TF-CBT model
Methods
Search strategy
Inclusion and exclusion criteria
Strength of the evidence
Effectiveness of the service
Results
Level of evidence
RCTs.
Studyb | Comparisongroup | Sample | Findingsc | Effect sized | Selected methodological strengths and weaknesses |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Cohen and Mannarino, 1996 (24); Cohen and Mannarino, 1997 (30) | Nondirective supportive therapy | N=86; mean age, 4.7 years; age range, 2–7; 58% females; experienced sexual abuse; 78% completed treatment across groups | TF-CBT was related to greater improvement in trauma-reactive behaviors and sexual behavior problems, compared with nondirective supportive therapy; the treatment effects endured at 12-month follow-up. Significant pre- to posttreatment decreases in sexual behavior were noted, but the differences were not significant when TF-CBT was compared with an active control group, except at 12-month follow-up. | Medium for sexual behavior at 12-month follow-up | There was an active control group. Developers were authors of the study. Blinding procedures were insufficient or not properly described. The study excluded children with intellectual or developmental disability, children with psychosis, and children whose parents had psychosis or active substance use. |
Deblinger et al., 1996 (26); Deblinger et al., 1999 (32) | Therapy as usual | N=100; mean age, 9.8 years; age range, 7–13; 83% females; experienced sexual abuse; 90% completed treatment and posttest | TF-CBT was associated with decreases in externalizing behaviors, depression, and PTSD symptoms among children and with increases in effective parenting skills among mothers compared with those in therapy as usual. | Medium for posttraumatic stress symptoms, depression, and behavior; medium for effective parenting practices | There was an active control group. Developers were authors of the study. Blinding procedures were insufficient or not properly described. The study excluded children with intellectual or developmental disability and children with psychotic symptoms. |
Cohen and Mannarino, 1998 (33); Cohen et al., 2005 (34) | Nondirective supportive therapy | N=82; mean age, 11 years; age range 7–15; 69% females; experienced sexual abuse; 60% completed treatment | TF-CBT was associated with greater improvements in depression, anxiety, behavior problems, and sexual behavior problems, compared with the control group. Significant pre- to posttreatment decreases in sexual behavior were noted, but no significant differences were found when TF-CBT was compared with an active control group. | Medium for depression | There was an active control group. Developers were authors of the study. Blinding procedures were insufficient or not properly described. The study excluded children with intellectual or developmental disability, psychotic symptoms, or an impairing substance use disorder and those whose parents had psychosis or active substance use. |
King et al., 2000 (28) | Wait-list control group; also compared child-only condition with full model | N=36; mean age, 11.4 years; age range, 5–17; 69% females; experienced sexual abuse; 75% completed treatment | TF-CBT was associated with a significant reduction in PTSD symptoms of re-experiencing, avoidance, and hyperarousal; lessened experiences of fear and anxiety; and improved global functioning, compared with the wait-list control group. Caregiver involvement was not related to treatment outcomes. There was no main effect for behavior problems. TF-CBT participants had a significant pre-post decrease in depression, but no significant between-groups difference was noted when TF-CBT was compared with the control group. | Large for posttraumatic stress symptoms | Authors were independent of model development. Blinding procedures were insufficient or not properly described. There was a wait-list control group. The study excluded children who were suicidal or extremely violent and those with intellectual or developmental disability or psychotic symptoms. |
Cohen et al., 2004 (25) | CCT | N=229; mean age, 10.8 years; age range, 8–14; percentage of females not reported; experienced sexual abuse; 88% completed at least 3 sessions | TF-CBT was associated with greater improvement in PTSD symptoms, depression, behavior problems, shame, and abuse-related attributions among children and adolescents, compared with CCT. Among caregivers, TF-CBT was associated with greater improvement in depression, abuse-specific distress, support of the child, and effective parenting practices. | Medium for posttraumatic stress symptoms and for behavior; medium for effective parenting practices | There was an active control group. Developers were authors of the study. Blinding procedures were insufficient or not properly described. The study excluded children with intellectual or developmental disability, psychotic symptoms, or impairing substance use disorder and those whose parents had psychosis or active substance use. |
Jaycox et al., 2010 (14) | Cognitive-Behavioral Intervention for Trauma in Schools | N=118; mean age, 11.5 years; age range, 9–15.5; 66% females; experienced hurricane exposure; 60% received some treatment | Average PTSD scores improved in both interventions from baseline to 10 months: PTSD scores for the TF-CBT group moved to the normal range, and scores for the comparison group were in the low clinical range. A significant pre- to posttreatment decrease in depression was noted for the TF-CBT group, but the between-group difference was not significant. | No significant effects were noted compared with the control group. | There was an active control group. Developers of the model were second and third authors. Blinding procedures were insufficient or not properly described. No exclusion criteria were cited. |
Cohen et al., 2011 (13) | CCT | N=124; mean age, 9.6 years; age range 7–14; 51% females; witnessed intimate-partner violence; 60% completed treatment | TF-CBT was associated with significant improvement of children’s PTSD symptoms and anxiety related to witnessing intimate-partner violence, compared with CCT, including greater decreases in hyperarousal and avoidance symptoms. A significant pre- to posttreatment decrease in depression was noted for the TF-CBT group, but the between-group difference was not significant. | Medium for posttraumatic stress symptoms | Developers were authors of the study. There was an active control group. The study excluded children with intellectual or developmental disability or psychotic symptoms or those whose parents had psychosis. |
Scheeringa et al., 2011 (31) | Wait-list control | N=75; mean age, 5.3 years; age range, 3–6; 34% females; experienced mixed trauma; retention not reported | Scores on PTSD improved over time for TF-CBT group but not for the control group. Effects remained when the analysis accounted for type of trauma (acute injury, witnessed domestic violence, or victim of Hurricane Katrina). A significant pre- to posttreatment decrease in depression was noted for the TF-CBT group, but the between-group difference was not significant. | Large for posttraumatic stress symptoms | The third author was a developer of the model. Blinding procedures were insufficient or not properly described. There was a wait-list control group. The study excluded children with intellectual or developmental disability. |
O’Callaghan et al., 2013 (11) | Wait-list control | N=52; mean age, 16 years; age range, 12–17; 100% females; experienced war exposure and sexual violence; 88% completed follow-up assessments | TF-CBT was associated with greater improvements in symptoms of trauma, depression, and anxiety; conduct problems; and prosocial behavior, compared with the control group. | Large for posttraumatic stress symptoms | This study was the first demonstration of TF-CBT within the population of the Democratic Republic of Congo. Authors were independent of the model development. Blinding procedures were insufficient or not properly described. There was a wait-list control group. The study excluded children who were suicidal or extremely violent, had intellectual or developmental disability, or had psychotic symptoms. Treatment was administered by individuals without a mental health or medical background. |
Jensen et al., 2013 (29) | Therapy as usual | N=156; mean age, 15.1 years; age range 10–18; 79% females; exhibited symptoms of trauma exposure; 78% completed 15 sessions and posttreatment assessment | TF-CBT was associated with lower levels of mental health symptoms (PTSD, depression, and general symptoms) and greater improvements in functional impairment, compared with the control group. | Medium for posttraumatic stress symptoms and depression | Authors were independent of model development. The study excluded children with psychotic symptoms or an impairing substance use disorder. |
Review articles.
Study | Focus of review | Outcomes assessed | Findings |
---|---|---|---|
Silverman et al., 2008 (12) | Review. Psychosocial treatments for children and adolescents exposed to traumatic events (included 7 studies of CBT, 5 specifically of TF-CBT) | PTSD symptoms, depression, anxiety, behavior problems | TF-CBT met well-established criteria for methodological rigor. CBT approaches, including TF-CBT, were associated with greater improvements in all outcomes relative to non-CBT approaches. |
Cary and McMillen, 2012 (10) | Systematic review. CBT for children and adolescents who have survived trauma (included 14 studies of CBT, 6 specifically of TF-CBT) | PTSD symptoms, depression, behavior problems | TF-CBT was associated with reducing symptoms of PTSD (immediately and 12 months after treatment) as well as reducing depression and problem behaviors (immediately but not 12 months after treatment) compared with the attention control group (a group that receives the same amount of attention as the experimental group but with a placebo approach not considered to be effective), standard community care, and wait-list control conditions. |
Gillies et al., 2012 (35) | Systematic review. Interventions for PTSD among children and adolescents (included 5 studies of CBT, 3 specifically of TF-CBT)b | PTSD symptoms, depression, anxiety, adverse effects, dropout | “Fair evidence” was cited that CBT (summarized together with TF-CBT) was associated with reduced PTSD symptoms compared with wait-list, usual care, and other therapies (supportive therapy, nondirective counseling, psychodynamic therapy, and hypnotherapy). |
Macdonald et al., 2012 (18) | Systematic review. Cognitive-behavioral interventions for children who have been sexually abused (included 10 studies of CBT, 6 specifically of TF-CBT) | PTSD symptoms, depression, anxiety, behavior problems | CBT, including TF-CBT, was associated with reducing symptoms of PTSD and anxiety, although effects were modest. CBT may have positive effects for children who have been sexually abused, but more study is needed. |
Forman-Hoffman et al., 2013 (19) | Comparative effectiveness review. Interventions for traumatic stress other than maltreatment or family violence (included one study of CBT in a school setting, no studies of TF-CBT) | PTSD symptoms, depression, functional impairment, aggression, psychological difficulties, conduct problems, prosocial behavior | Evidence was low for CBT interventions targeting children exposed to trauma, regardless of whether they were experiencing symptoms. School-based treatments with elements of TF-CBT showed promising effects for children exposed to trauma. |
Fraser et al., 2013 (20) | Comparative effectiveness review. Interventions for children exposed to maltreatment (included 3 studies of CBT, 2 specifically of TF-CBTc) | Well-being (mental and behavioral health; caregiver-child relationship; cognitive, language, and physical development; school-based functioning) and child welfare (safety, placement stability, and permanency) | Authors stated that a strong conclusion in support of any of the therapies, including CBT, could not be drawn from the studies examined in the review. |
Populations.
Effectiveness of the service
Posttraumatic stress.
Depression.
Behavior problems (sexual and other).
Parenting practices.
Individual treatment components.
Retention.
Conclusions
Acknowledgments and disclosures
References
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