Violence Prevention: Psychological Harm from Traumatic Events Among Children and Adolescents – Psychodynamic Therapy – Inactive

Inactive Community Guide Review

The reviews and findings listed on this page are inactive. Inactive reviews and findings are not scheduled for an update at this time, though they may be updated in the future. Findings become inactive when reviewed interventions are no longer commonly used, when other organizations begin systematically reviewing the interventions, or as a result of conflicting priorities within a topic area.

Summary of CPSTF Finding

The Community Preventive Services Task Force (CPSTF) finds insufficient evidence to determine the effectiveness of psychodynamic therapy to treat symptomatic youth who have been exposed to traumatic events.

The CPSTF has related findings for the following types of therapies:

Intervention

The Community Guide conducted systematic reviews of five interventions commonly used to reduce psychological harm from traumatic events among children and adolescents: play therapy, art therapy, psychological debriefing, psychodynamic therapy, pharmacological therapies.

A traumatic event is one in which a person experiences or witnesses actual or threatened death or serious injury, or a threat to the physical integrity of self or others. Trauma may take the form of single or repeated events that are natural or human-made (e.g., tsunami or bombing) and intentional or unintentional (e.g., rape versus car crashes or severe illness). Traumatic exposures may have only temporary effects or result in no apparent harm. However, traumatic exposures may result in psychological harm and lead to long term health consequences.

CPSTF Finding and Rationale Statement

Read the CPSTF finding.

About The Systematic Review

The CPSTF finding is based on evidence from a systematic review of 1 study (search period through March 2007). The review was conducted on behalf of the CPSTF by a team of specialists in systematic review methods, and in research, practice, and policy related to violence prevention.

Context

Psychodynamic therapy seeks to allow the traumatized individual to release unconscious thoughts and emotions and to integrate the traumatic event into his/her understanding of life and self-concept.

Summary of Results

Detailed results from the systematic review are available in the CPSTF finding.

One study was included in the systematic review.

  • Following the treatments, compared to case management, child parent psychotherapy was associated with a significant reduction in PTSD symptoms among children in the study.

Summary of Economic Evidence

An economic review of this intervention was not conducted because the CPSTF did not have enough information to determine if the intervention works.

Applicability

Applicability of this intervention across different settings and populations was not assessed because the CPSTF did not have enough information to determine if the intervention works.

Evidence Gaps

The CPSTF identified several areas that have limited information. Additional research and evaluation could help fill remaining gaps in the evidence base. (What are evidence gaps?)

The following outlines evidence gaps from these reviews on reducing psychological harms from traumatic events: Individual CBT; Group CBT; Play Therapy; Art Therapy; Psychodynamic Therapy; Pharmacological Therapy; Psychological Debriefing.

  • Identification of robust predictors of transient and enduring symptoms following traumatic events would allow for better screening of exposed children and adolescents and more efficient allocation of treatment resources.
  • The optimal timing of cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) intervention following the exposure and the onset of symptoms is important to assess.
  • It would be useful to stratify the outcomes of CBT treatment by the severity of patient PTSD symptoms and history. For example, it would be useful to know whether children and adolescents with multiple traumatic exposures require more intensive or longer treatment.
  • One study with long term follow-up indicates that it may take a year after the end of the intervention for benefits to appear. This outcome should be replicated. If confirmed, it suggests that follow-up periods of less than one year are not adequate and may erroneously indicate intervention ineffectiveness.
  • The cost effectiveness and differential cost effectiveness of individual and group CBT among children and adolescents should be explored.
  • The effectiveness of individual and group CBT among minority populations, especially in communities in which violence is prevalent, should be further explored.
  • Adaptations of CBT involving the recruitment, training, deployment, and supervision of nonprofessionals should be evaluated, and their applicability to low-income countries should also be explored.

Furthermore, the finding of insufficient evidence to determine the effectiveness of several of the interventions reviewed highlights the need for additional well-controlled studies of these interventions. Because CBT has been found to be an effective intervention, and because research funds are limited, it would be useful to adopt CBT as a comparison in future evaluations. Because of harms reported for psychological debriefing among adults, caution should be taken in research on this intervention with children and adolescents.

Study Characteristics

  • Study participants were children ages 3 5 years who had been exposed to violence between their parents.
  • Sessions were held weekly for 50 weeks.
  • The intervention used a manual for implementation and assessed fidelity as part of its evaluation.
  • Control subjects received case management plus individual psychotherapy; they were phoned at least monthly to check on their well-being, and they were referred for psychotherapy when it was indicated.

Publications

Wethington HR, Hahn RA, Fuqua-Whitley DS, et al. The effectiveness of interventions to reduce psychological harm from traumatic events among children and adolescents: a systematic review. American Journal of Preventive Medicine 2008;35(3):287-313.

Task Force on Community Services. Recommendations to reduce psychological harm from traumatic events among children and adolescents. American Journal of Preventive Medicine 2008;35(3):314-6.

Analytic Framework

Effectiveness Review

Analytic Framework

When starting an effectiveness review, the systematic review team develops an analytic framework. The analytic framework illustrates how the intervention approach is thought to affect public health. It guides the search for evidence and may be used to summarize the evidence collected. The analytic framework often includes intermediate outcomes, potential effect modifiers, potential harms, and potential additional benefits.

Summary Evidence Table

Effectiveness Review

Summary Evidence Table
Contains evidence from reviews of individual CBT; group CBT; play therapy; art therapy; psychodynamic therapy; pharmacological therapy; psychological debriefing

Included Studies

The number of studies and publications do not always correspond (e.g., a publication may include several studies or one study may be explained in several publications).

Effectiveness Review

Lieberman AF, Van Horn P, Ippen CG. Toward evidence-based treatment: child-parent psychotherapy with preschoolers exposed to marital violence. J Am Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry 2005;44:1241 8.

Search Strategies

The following outlines the search strategy used for these reviews on reducing psychological harms from traumatic events: Individual CBT; Group CBT; Play Therapy; Art Therapy; Psychodynamic Therapy; Pharmacological Therapy; Psychological Debriefing.

Effectiveness Review

Electronic searches for literature were conducted in the MEDLINE; EMBASE; ERIC; NTIS (National Technical Information Service); PsycINFO; Social Sciences Abstracts; and NCJRS (National Criminal Justice Reference Service) databases for all dates up to March 2007. Search terms included the generic and specific terms for treatments, different forms of trauma, and terms such as evaluate, effective, and outcome. Also reviewed were the references listed in all retrieved articles; researchers also consulted with experts on the systematic review development team and elsewhere for additional studies. Studies published as journal articles, government reports, books, and book chapters were considered.

  1. (THERAPY OR THERAPIES OR COUNSELING OR DEBRIEFING OR (CRITICAL()INCIDENT(2W)MANAGEMENT) OR SCREENING OR INTERVENTION? OR CISD OR CISM)/TI,AB
  2. (CHILD? OR TODDLER? OR YOUTH? OR ADOLESCENT? OR INFANT? OR BABY OR BABIES OR PEDIATRIC? OR TEEN OR TEENS OR TEENAGER?)/TI,AB
  3. (VIOLENCE OR VIOLENT OR DISASTER? OR FIRE OR CHILD()ABUSE? OR SEXUAL()ABUSE? OR RAPE OR WAR OR TRAUMA? OR TERRORIST OR TERRORISM OR CRISES OR CRISIS OR PTSD OR POST()TRAUMATIC OR POSTTRAUMATIC OR POST-TRAUMATIC OR DROWNING OR BOMBING …
  4. (EVALUAT? OR EFFICACY OR EFFECTIVE? OR ASSESSMENT? OR OUTCOME?)/TI,AB
  5. S1(20N)S2
  6. S1(20N)S3
  7. S1(20N)S4
  8. S5 AND S6 AND S7
  9. (ADULT? OR BLOOD OR XRAY? OR X-RAY? OR BRAIN()INJUR? OR PERSONNEL OR MANPOWER OR CRANIOCEREBRAL OR HEAD()TRAUMA OR ASTHMA OR BRONCHODILATOR OR KIDNEY? OR LUNG? OR CRIMINOLOGY OR COUPLE?()THERAPY OR CHILD()ABUSE()PREVENTION)/DE
  10. 10 S8 NOT S9
  11. (ADULT? OR BLOOD OR XRAY? OR X-RAY? OR BRAIN()INJUR? OR PERSONNEL OR MANPOWER OR CRANIOCEREBRAL OR HEAD()TRAUMA OR ASTHMA OR BRONCHODILATOR OR KIDNEY? OR LUNG? OR CRIMINOLOGY OR COUPLE?()THERAPY OR CHILD()ABUSE()PREVENTION OR SURGER? …
  12. S8 NOT S11
  13. (RISK? OR SCREEN?)/TI
  14. S12 NOT S13
  15. RD (unique items)
  16. (ADULT? OR WOMAN OR WOMEN)/TI
  17. S15 NOT S16
  18. (CHILD? OR TODDLER? OR YOUTH? OR ADOLESCENT? OR INFANT? OR BABY OR BABIES OR PEDIATRIC? OR TEEN OR TEENS OR TEENAGER?)/TI
  19. S17 AND S18
  20. (VIOLENCE OR VIOLENT OR DISASTER? OR FIRE OR CHILD()ABUSE? OR SEXUAL()ABUSE? OR RAPE OR WAR OR TRAUMA? OR TERRORIST OR TERRORISM OR CRISES OR CRISIS OR PTSD OR POST()TRAUMATIC OR POSTTRAUMATIC OR POST-TRAUMATIC OR DROWNING OR BOMBING …
  21. S19 AND S20

Considerations for Implementation

The CPSTF did not have enough evidence to determine whether the intervention is or is not effective. This does not mean that the intervention does not work, but rather that additional research is needed to determine whether or not the intervention is effective.